With GRAV-16, there's kind of two different setups that has to be done. One is the powers of tau, which is general and could be used for many circuits. And then there's circuit-specific ones. We did sort of the one that's 100 plus million constraints will be supported. But we could have done larger, but we didn't want the parameters to be too huge.
In this week’s episode, host Anna Rose chats with Chhi'mèd Künzang and François Garillot from Lurk Labs about all things Lurk, Lisp and zk languages.
They discuss the history of the Lurk project, from its beginnings with Protocol Labs (the team that built Filecoin), to its emergence as a Turing-complete programming language for recursive zkSNARKs.
They discuss Lurk’s relationship with Lisp, what Lisp is, and how developers familiar with that family of languages would be able to interact with Lurk. They then discuss how Lurk compares to other zkDSLs and the new innovations this Lisp-based language brings to the table.
Here’s some additional links for this episode:
Programming Languages
Lurk Links
Additional Reading/Listening
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