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by TeMPOraL
3898 days ago
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True. You have to learn to treat programs written in dynamic languages as living, mutable, interactive things instead of designs set in stone. However, when a simple syntax derails your reading, it is a thing of concern. Then again, you could make similar shenanigans in Common Lisp with `symbol-macrolet', but it's obscure feature that pretty much by definition will be used only by people who know when to use it :). |
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Definitely agreed! It's rare that I've come across a set of code that is _so_ over-abstracted or dynamic that reading the code doesn't usually shed light on the issue I'm after, and usually it's a "dense" language (Scala, Lisps, etc.) that manages to achieve that.