What do people here use as an IDE?
so
so at so.do
Thu Oct 14 03:28:27 PDT 2010
> When it comes to programming languages, the C/C++ audience isn't the
> sharpest knife in the drawer. In fact they most likely reject any other
> language if the syntax and semantics aren't 95% the same.
I don't give a damn about syntax being C like or not, if it is good at
expressing things, that is enough for me. None of my posts here state
otherwise.
> What's your definition of a "system language"? Being able to write
> operating systems, OS drivers, kernel mode applications, embedded small
> footprint applications, server applications, games, simulations, HPC? If
> you only need one of these domains in your project, why should you care
> about the rest - the right tool for the job, right?
It is right, right (and only) tool in those domains, and as you can see it
is kind of a large area.
None of those languages are the right tool in those areas, are they?
> I'm guessing your definition is the one that makes functional languages
> or imperative languages with different syntax from C/C+++ look bad and
> C/C
> ++ shine. Your agenda is to crush all competition because the retarded
> competitors think *differently* and that's dangerous!
I said i like Haskell, also python... i am not an OOP fan. I don't have an
agenda to crash any competition. How did you get here beyond me...
Look, i said things like "OS" "C audience", "high performance", "system
language". Is that really hard to get?
--
Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/
More information about the Digitalmars-d
mailing list