I’ve been wanting to write-up a comparison on Nim and Crystal for quite some time now, and I’m happy that I’m finally able to do so. What I’ve decided on doing; is breaking this up into a three part series as there are SO many features of both languages I’d like to talk about, and therein many opinions held too. I do have a habit of writing very long articles, so I’d like to limit the topic scope, to keep each of these a little snappier!

Before I go into specifics on either of these languages, I’d first like to go into my reasons for first learning both languages, and briefly touch on my past experiences with the two of them. I admit that I have had more experience with Crystal than I have with Nim; however, I will give an objective view of both languages until I go into my personal preference towards the end of each article in this series.

crystal or nim? Both super immature but fun — @r4vi (@r4vi) June 13, 2017

Back in mid-2017, I sent out a tweet asking my dev followers which low-level languages they would recommend I take a look at. For a while before this, I had been waiting for a new systems language for me to learn, but until this tweet, I never really found one that I was actually interested in taking a look at.

Naturally, both languages have a TONNE of features, so I’m not going to go into details on things like basic types, etc. I will simply compare the biggest things that attracted me to both languages. For in-depth tutorials on the features of both langs, check out the Crystal Docs, or the Nim Docs.

Anyway, let’s take a look at both languages, and you can make your own mind up as to which you’d rather be programming in. Maybe both. Maybe neither!

Nim

Nim is a statically-typed, imperative, systems programming language; aiming to achieve the performance of C, be as expressive as Lisp, and have a simple, clear syntax like Python. I have to say, from my experience Nim manages to pretty much fit these criterion.

By compiling to C, Nim is able to take advantage of many features offered by modern C compilers. The primary benefits gained by this compilation model include incredible portability and optimisations.

The binaries produced by Nim have zero dependencies and are typically very small. This makes their distribution easy and keeps your users happy.

When I say it pretty much matches the criteria, the only statement that doesn’t quite match is achieving the performance of C. In realise this is an almost impossible task, but Nim actually did fall short on a few occasions when it came to performance. I will go into detail about this later on in the article.

Installing Nim

Nim is super easy to install. If you’re on Windows, head over here, and download/run the installer.

If you’re on any other Unix-based system, you can run:

$ curl https://nim-lang.org/choosenim/init.sh -sSf | sh`



If you’re on Mac, and with Homebrew installed, simply run:

$ brew install nim



You could also consider using choosenim to manage Nim installations in a similar way to pyenv and rustup .

Interfacing Other Languages

One of the things that attracted me to both Nim and Crystal, was the ability to natively interface with other languages, and the ease with which that is achieved. Nim has bidirectional interfacing not only with C, but also natively with JavaScript. Crystal natively interfaces with C, but is only unidirectional. Definitely a point scored here for Nim!

When it comes to building DApps, the variety of target hardware they must be run on is already large, and growing all the time. The low-level ability to interop with other languages makes for both languages being a much more attractive proposition.

For a quick demo, let’s take a look at interfacing both C and JavaScript from Nim.

C Invocation

Firstly, create the file logic.c with the following content:

int addTwoIntegers ( int a, int b)

{

return a + b;

}



Next, create the file calculator.nim with the following content:



proc addTwoIntegers(a, b: cint ): cint



when isMainModule:

echo addTwoIntegers( 3 , 7 )



Now then, with these two very simple files in place, we can run:

$ nim c -r calculator.nim



The Nim compiler will compile the logic.c file in addition to calculator.nim and link both into an executable; which outputs 10 when run. Very sharp, in my opinion!

JavaScript Invocation

Even sharper, in my opinion, is the ability to interop with JavaScript. Create a file titled host.html with the following content:

< html >

< body >

< script type = "text/javascript" >

function addTwoIntegers (a, b)

{

return a + b;

}

</ script >



< script type = "text/javascript" src = "calculator.js" > </ script >

</ body >

</ html >



Now, create another calculator.nim file with the following content (or reuse the one from the above C example):

proc addTwoIntegers(a, b: int ): int



when isMainModule:

echo addTwoIntegers( 3 , 7 )



Compile the Nim code to JavaScript by running:

$ nim js -o:calculator.js calculator.nim



Once that’s done, go ahead and open host.html in a browser and you should see the value 10 in the browser’s console. I think this is REALLY neat. It’s superb how easy it is to achieve that, too.

Aside – a Quick (not-so) Secret:

Instead of writing out the HTML above, you could actually use Nim’s native HTML DSL:

import html_dsl



html page:

head:

title( "Title" )

body:

p( "Hello" )

p( "World" )

dv:

p "Example"



echo render(page())



Running this will output the following:



< html class = 'has-navbar-fixed-top' >

< head >

< meta charset = "utf-8" >

< meta name = "viewport" content = "width=device-width, initial-scale=1" >

< title > Title </ title >

</ head >

< body class = 'has-navbar-fixed-top' >

< p > Hello </ p >

< p > World </ p >

< div >

< p > Example </ p >

</ div >

</ body >

</ html >



Crystal

Crystal is a statically-typed, object-oriented, systems programming language; with the aim of achieving the speed and performance of c/c++, whilst having a syntax as simple, readable, and easy to learn as Ruby.

I first came across Crystal when I saw @sferik giving a talk on it in Poland back in 2015. Video here. It was a great talk, and sparked my interest in Crystal right there and then. When I initially explored Crystal I thought it looked awesome, but I was too busy with all the other languages I was using on a daily basis, to be able to focus my time on it properly.

Installing Crystal

You can find all of the relevant instructions for installing Crystal, on the main website installation page.

If you are on Mac, and have Homebrew installed, you can simply run:

$ brew install crystal



However, if you are a Windows user, for the time being you are out of luck, unless you use the Windows Subsystem for Linux. If I were in a more shocking/pedantic mood, I’d take a (not yet gained) point away from Crystal here, for lack of Windows support.

Interfacing C

Let’s build a simple script in C that says “hi!”. We’ll then write a Crystal app to bind to our C library. This is a great starting point for anyone who wants to know about binding C in Crystal.

First off, let’s create a project with Crystal’s scaffolding tool (I’ll cover this feature later). Run:

$ crystal init app sayhi_c



Then head into the directory sayhi_c/src/sayhi_c and let’s create a file sayhi.c with the following contents:





void hi ( const char * name) {

printf ( "Hi %s!

" , name);

}



Now we need to compile our C file into an object. On Ubuntu or Mac using gcc we can run:

$ gcc -c sayhi.c -o sayhi.o



Using the -o flags allow us to create an Object filetype. Once we’ve got our Object file, we can bind it from within our Crystal app. Open up our sayhi_c.cr file, and have it reflect the following:

require "./sayhi_c/*"







lib Say

fun hi (name : LibC: :Char*) : Void

end



Say.hi( "Status" )



I’ll mention now that there are no implicit type conversions except to_unsafe - explained here when invoking a C function: you must pass the exact type that is expected.

Also worth noting at this point is that since we have built our C file into an object file, we can include it in the project directory and link from there. When we want to link dynamic libraries or installed C packages, we can just link them without including a path.

So, if we build our project file and run it, we get the following:

$ crystal build --release src/sayhi_c.cr



$ ./sayhi_c



> Hi Status!



As you can see, Nim takes the winners trophy in this case, as it is much simpler to achieve a similar goal. With Nim, we were also able to link both the Nim and C files into the same executable, which Crystal sadly cannot do.

Performance Tests

Parsing & calculating values from a large JSON file:

Firstly, we need to generate our large JSON file. For this test, we’re going to generate a dataset which includes 1 Million items.

We can do so with the following Ruby script:

require 'json'



x = []



1000000 .times do

h = {

'x' => rand,

'y' => rand,

'z' => rand,

'name' => ( 'a' .. 'z' ).to_a.shuffle[ 0 .. 5 ].join + ' ' + rand( 10000 ).to_s,

'opts' => { '1' => [ 1 , true ]},

}

x << h

end



File.open( "1.json" , 'w' ) { |f| f.write JSON.pretty_generate( 'coordinates' => x, 'info' => "some info" ) }



This will generate a JSON file of around 212mb, with the following syntax:

{

"coordinates" : [

{

"x" : 0.10327081810860272 ,

"y" : 0.03247172212368832 ,

"z" : 0.8155255437507467 ,

"name" : "scojbq 5965" ,

"opts" : {

"1" : [

1 ,

true

]

}

}

],

"info" : "some info"

}



Now that we have our chunky JSON file; we can write our first test – in Nim:

import json



let jobj = parseFile( "1.json" )



let coordinates = jobj[ "coordinates" ].elems

let len = float (coordinates.len)

var x = 0 . 0

var y = 0 . 0

var z = 0 . 0



for coord in coordinates:

x += coord[ "x" ].fnum

y += coord[ "y" ].fnum

z += coord[ "z" ].fnum



echo x / len

echo y / len

echo z / len



And again; the same simple test, this time written in Crystal:

require "json"



text = File.read( "1.json" )

jobj = JSON.parse(text)

coordinates = jobj[ "coordinates" ].as_a

len = coordinates.size

x = y = z = 0



coordinates.each do |coord|

x += coord[ "x" ].as_f

y += coord[ "y" ].as_f

z += coord[ "z" ].as_f

end



p x / len

p y / len

p z / len



Building our test files into tiny release packages with the respective commands below:

$ crystal build json_test.cr --release -o json_test_cr --no-debug



$ nim c -o:json_test_nim -d:danger --cc:gcc --verbosity:0 json_test.nim



We can then time & run those packages, to obtain our test results:

Language Time (s) Memory (Mb) Nim 6.92 1320.4 Crystal 4.58 960.7

As you can see; in this case Crystal is the more performant language – taking less time to execute & complete the test, and also fewer Megabytes in memory doing so.

Base64 encoding / decoding a large blob:

In this test; we will firstly encode and then decode a string, with a current timestamp into newly allocated buffers, utilising the Base64 algorithm. For starters, let’s look at the Nim test:

import base64, times, strutils, strformat



let STR_SIZE = 131072

let TRIES = 8192

let str = strutils.repeat('a', STR_SIZE )



var str2 = base64.encode(str)

stdout .write( fmt"encode {str[..3]}... to {str2[..3]}...: " )



var t = times.epochTime()

var i = 0

var s: int64 = 0

while i < TRIES :

str2 = base64.encode(str)

s += len(str2)

i += 1

echo( fmt"{s}, {formatFloat(times.epochTime() - t, ffDefault, 6)}" )



var str3 = base64.decode(str2)

stdout .write( fmt"decode {str2[..3]}... to {str3[..3]}...: " )



t = times.epochTime()

i = 0

s = 0

while i < TRIES :

str3 = base64.decode(str2)

s += len(str3)

i += 1

echo( fmt"{s}, {formatFloat(times.epochTime() - t, ffDefault, 6)}" )



And now the same test, written in Crystal:

require "base64"



STR_SIZE = 131072

TRIES = 8192



str = "a" * STR_SIZE



str2 = Base64.strict_encode(str)

print "encode #{str[ 0 .. 3 ]} ... to #{str2[ 0 .. 3 ]} ...: "



t, s = Time.local, 0

TRIES.times do |i|

str2 = Base64.strict_encode(str)

s += str2.bytesize

end

puts " #{s} , #{Time.local - t} "



str3 = Base64.decode_string(str2)

print "decode #{str2[ 0 .. 3 ]} ... to #{str3[ 0 .. 3 ]} ...: "



t, s = Time.local, 0

TRIES.times do |i|

str3 = Base64.decode_string(str2)

s += str3.bytesize

end

puts " #{s} , #{Time.local - t} "



We can again; build our Base64 test files into release packages with the respective commands below:

$ crystal build base64_test.cr --release -o base64_test_cr --no-debug



$ nim c -o:base64_test_nim -d:danger --cc:gcc --verbosity:0 base64_test.nim



As with our last test suite, we can then time & run those packages, to obtain our test results:

Language Time (s) Memory (Mb) Nim 4.17 6.6 Crystal 2.36 3.5

Once again, to my surprise, Crystal came out on top. And did again and again for me, running a bunch of different tests I could scrape together from other curious devs.

Conclusion

The summary of this first-in-series article, is most definitely one of surprise. I already knew that Crystal was a highly-performant language, and I have previously done my own research & testing to see how close to C speeds it could achieve. That being said, I was also already aware that Nim claims close to C speeds, and that one of the language’s principals was to run well on old & less-performant hardware.

Yet, Crystal beat not only my own expectations; but beat Nim for both memory usage AND execution times. I really didn’t expect to see Crystal come out this far ahead in performance. On the other hand, Nim came out by-far the leader when it comes to language interoperability. Nim makes it even easier than Crystal when interfacing other langs – not something I thought possible, given just how easy Crystal makes the task.

In conclusion, it seems that we have 1 point for Nim (interoperability), and 1 point for Crystal (performance). Both languages have pleasantly surprised me, and I look forward to diving into the next topics in the series:

Part 2: Threading and Tooling

Part 3: Crypto, DApps and P2P

These two articles will be released over the next couple of days, so don’t forget to come back then to check them out!

Thanks for reading - as ever, if you have any questions, please feel free to reach out at [email protected].

- @rbin