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by jshen 4884 days ago
Unlike you, I'll avoid the ad hominem. The commenter I was replying to said that java is EASIER to visually parse. Your java code is harder to visually parse than my ruby code. It's not hard to visually parse, but it's harder than the ruby code which was my point.

btw, I've added a sort to mine, what would that look like for yours?

https://gist.github.com/jaydonnell/4735159

Edit: I see you don't have the courage to use your real account.

1 comments

My name is J. Chan, and I forgot the password to my other account. Thanks for making fun of my name.
Why didn't you add the sort?
Use a Comparator. http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/Comparato...

Since it seems like you're talking about visual activity now instead of visual clarity, I agree that Java will be more "hard to read" under your definition. But aside from the two lines for the class declaration & method declaration and the other two for the ending brackets, there really isn't much bloat.

All that you have to implement for a simple numerical sort is some logic if a > b return 1 else if a == b return 0 else return -1.

I'm absolutely talking about visual clarity. In the ruby code it is significantly more visually clear what is going on because the java code has a lot of incidental noise. If you would show a java version that would be clear to everyone, which is probably why you didn't add the sort. The code side-by-side will speak for itself.
Wow guys really.

  Iterable<String> s = Splitter.on(" ").split("Hello World");
  Multiset<String> counts = HashMultiSet.create(s);
  Multiset<String> sorted = Multisets.copyHightestCountFirst(counts);
Or to sort by counts directly

  TreeHashSet.create(Splitter.on(" ").split("Hello World"))

Granted this uses guava, but there is nothing really more readable about your ruby code than this guy's java code. To say he 'lacks courage' ... jesus I'm still laughing. "Why didn't you add the sort!" You're too much man.
Your code doesn't do the same thing as mine. You need to start with an array of sentences.

Show the java code that does the same thing and it will be clear that the ruby is more readable.