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by coldtea
1885 days ago
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>that was written by someone who probably, ironically, hasn't read all of those actually-seminal papers is more than a bit frustrating. For completeness and curiosity maybe. Otherwise one doesn't have to read the "actually-seminal papers" if they already know the concepts from the 40 to 20+ years that followed. Do physicists need to read the original Einstein or Maxwell if they had read tomes of subsequent course and academic books on the subject, plus modern papers for the later developments? In any case, I'm pretty sure the author of that post [1] had read at least the CSP papers -- he works on the Dart language team, and has written Game Programming Patterns and Crafting Interpreters, both quite popular books, which have been discussed (as in first page) more than 3-4 times in HN in the past years. [1] https://journal.stuffwithstuff.com/2015/02/01/what-color-is-.... |
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I guess maybe the issue in your comment is that my complex sentence with "is more than a bit frustrating" was mis-parsed, as you left off the direct referent of it and then seem to be arguing back at me with the same point I was trying to make with some emphatic irony (I was really hoping to provide three papers all from 1978, but there wasn't a perfect one on continuations)... to re-architect the center a bit:
> ...the idea that I must have read this one random recent blog post [--when I can't imagine this person has read the specific literature I think everyone should have read, as there was an infinite amount of it and a lot of it is equivalent to the rest: the only thing that makes this blog post exciting is almost certainly some kind of recency bias--] is more than a bit frustrating.