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by tmbrggmn
4655 days ago
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It always amazes me when people try to somehow empirically prove that one programming language is better than another. Sure, it's an interesting question to consider as a thought-exercise, but is there really anything valuable to be gained from expanding on this any further than that? I've always though that, other than objective measurements of binary code performance, whether or not you think a programming language is good is almost entirely determined by its syntax and feature set. I feel no need to go around the internet all day proclaiming my programming language of choice to be the best and/or others to be inferior. This reminds me of that link I saw on here a while ago titled "Why Go? Use Racket!". Personally, my answer would be: because I find 9000 brackets in a simple program to be poorly readable. However, I respect anyone who disagrees and thinks the opposite. If it allows them to make great software and have fun doing it: by all means go for it! You apparently thought the write-up was somehow overly condescending to C++ programmers (I assume), while I personally thought it was the complete opposite. |
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