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The article under discussion
Why I can use perl and hate dynamic language weenies, too
is commentary on
Invasion of the Dynamic Language Weenies, which in turn is (in-part) commentary on the article
What's Wrong With Ruby?, which was written by
Matthew Huntbach, a Lecturer in Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London.
Some of Huntbach's commentary about the current state of Java caught my eye: However, these days when I look at the Java section in the bookshop, there is little I understand. There are huge numbers of add-on libraries, each of which has its justification but which have been developed on a learning curve and so haven’t got it quite right. Even the core APIs are bloated, since backwards compatibility means one cannot throw away one’s first solution to a problem once it has become an integral part of the language, even if developing and using it has led to a better solution. It seems to be inevitable that once a language becomes widely used as a general purpose language, it is pushed in directions it isn’t suited to, builds up unnecessary complexity through accretions, and the urge to throw it away and start again becomes stronger. A bit like any large software system which has served its time. I'm getting to the point where I find things like this screamingly funny... Use JAVA! It will save costs by encouraging code reuse! Now let's throw that code away and re-write it all in the next language that will encourage code-reuse. And using an out-dated language like perl is obviously pointless (it's more fun to re-write everything from scratch than download a solution from CPAN). (I sometimes wonder how "Computer Scientists" call themselves "Scientists" with a straight face...)
In reply to code reuse?
by doom
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