Well, the problem is that it's supposed to catch those loads of errors but doesn't because it forced you to typecast to get anything at all done. If I have to typecast everything to void* (sorry, object) whenever I store it in a generic datastructure and then typecast it "back" whenever I access it I effectively turned off compile time type checking.

And no I don't think Java's (or C#'s) type "system" should look like Perl's. But something closer to ML, Clean or Haskel would definitely make things much better. You'd get the same kind of compiletype checking, but without having to typecast all the time and without the runtime typing errors caused by errorneous typecasting.

Jenda
We'd like to help you learn to help yourself
Look around you, all you see are sympathetic eyes
Stroll around the grounds until you feel at home
   -- P. Simon in Mrs. Robinson


In reply to Re^2: Static typing is mostly a waste of time by Jenda
in thread Static typing is mostly a waste of time by johnnywang

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