I'm not claiming static typing is best, just wondering what advantages it really has. I thought they were:
- faster code
- catching some errors early
Looking at my own use (in Java), I'm mostly working for the compiler. When it catches a type error it's usually just an error in the type, not a code error - in fact, I can't recall it ever catching an actual bug (though it probably has).
Sometimes, I've gone through code to tighten up the types - for example, there may be a set of classes implementing some interface I, and so a field that can hold any of those classes is given type I. But this can be over-broad: sometimes there's also some fields that can only hold a subset of those classes, so the type system can be tightened by creating a new interface J, implemented only by that subset of classes, and those field are given type J. While this is more "correct", it is incredibly tedious, and quite brittle if something changes.
So, I think faster code is the main benefit for static typing in mainstream compiled languages (Java, C#, C, C++, objective-C), and type-safety is a far second - though there's also some niches where type-safety is extremely helpful, such as ml languages for integrated circuit verification. I've also heard that static typing is important in databases.
But I think there's one other advantage:
- documentation
Documentation in that you can look at a method, and know what valid arguments are. And for auto-generated docs, the argument types are hyperlinked to the interface and implementations available. I don't think this is a killer-advantage, but it is a real one.
Obviously, python and ruby etc do great without static typing. I'm just wondering what the advantages of it are - what do you think? What's your experience?