Dear developpers and maintainers, please continue providing us with
applications written in the language you prefer.
I have personnal feelings about which languages are productive and
produce bug-free software and which, in the contrary let you waste your
time in correcting your bugs and eventually produce wrong result without
people even noticing. But I am afraid this leads to endless discussions.
The choice of the language is yours and is absolutely respectable.
And I am immensely gratefull to you for giving the result of your work
to the community whatever the language.
Just the following restriction: please, when your piece of software
is first of all an API, like dbus is, let it be not too much
language-oriented. I mean don't force other programmers to think like
you, or, worse, don't make the API only usable by applications written
in one language.
Didier
Le 12/02/2015 22:36, Hendrik Boom a écrit :
> On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 09:54:05PM +0100, Didier Kryn wrote:
>> Hey Guys, I would love to have a dispute about languages, but I
>> don't think it's in the scope of this mailing list. Do you? Excuse
>> me for having fed it.
> Off topic? That's already been established, in a thread about what
> scripting lannguage to use for Devuan. The conclusion there we
> use whatever the scripts were already written in on Debian, rather than
> rewriting everything.
>
> But I think it is still useful to point out excellent, little-known
> languages that might make programming a lot more reliable yet still
> efficient.
>
> There aren't many of those, and some of the best are not well known.
>
> I'd still recommend Modula 3 (except for its bulky syntax) and ocaml
> (on a machine where it runs as native code).
>
> And I think Styx (used in the Inferno project, a successor to plan 9)
> is worth a mention, though I have no experiennce with it.
>
> And would you mind posting in straight Unicode, or even ASCII,
> but without HTML tags?
>
> -- hendrik
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