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I've always thought that this would be an neat way to program websites, especially after reading Paul Graham's articles. The problem I see is that you're going to start spending more time in each request serializing and deserializing your continuations vs. actually serving up the request.

Not to mention that most corporate websites aren't a single continuation - they're groups of vaguely related continuations. How would you handle the situation of where someone has done 10 clicks in one area, then clicks on the navbar to go to a completely unrelated area? Say, going from "Reports" to "Messaging" ... do you continue to handle the continuation from "Reports" every pageview while the user is going through the "Messaging" continuation?

Being right, does not endow the right to be rude; politeness costs nothing.
Being unknowing, is not the same as being stupid.
Expressing a contrary opinion, whether to the individual or the group, is more often a sign of deeper thought than of cantankerous belligerence.
Do not mistake your goals as the only goals; your opinion as the only opinion; your confidence as correctness. Saying you know better is not the same as explaining you know better.


In reply to Re: Continuity: Continuation-Based Web Applications by dragonchild
in thread Continuity: Continuation-Based Web Applications by awwaiid

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