|
|
|
|
|
by usgroup
150 days ago
|
|
I think this article is problematic because Prolog is truly a different paradigm which requires time to understand. Laments about no strings, no functions and "x is confusing" read like expectations of a different paradigm. Prolog is also unusual in a sense that it is essential to understand what the interpreter does with your code in order to be able to write it well. For vanilla Prolog, that's not so hard. However, when constraint programming and other extensions are added, that becomes much harder to do. |
|
There were only two prevalent attitudes, some of us really loved FP (me included), others hated it and could hardly wait to get it done.
Somehow there was a similar overlap with those of us that enjoyed going out of mainstream languages, and those that rather stay with Pascal and C.