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Mail Archives: djgpp/1997/12/18/01:00:29

From: "John M. Aldrich" <fighteer AT cs DOT com>
Newsgroups: alt.comp.lang.learn.c-c++,comp.os.msdos.djgpp
Subject: Re: Which is best? C or C++ ???
Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 18:02:49 +0000
Organization: Two pounds of chaos and a pinch of salt
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Message-ID: <3496C249.263D@cs.com>
References: <348a15e5 DOT 826895 AT news DOT clear DOT net DOT nz> <01bd0a80$b482bb00$a47de3c7 AT merlyn>
Reply-To: fighteer AT cs DOT com
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To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com
DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp

~liquid~ wrote:
> 
> I thought that the object oriented nature of C++ would give it a leg up on the older version?
> I haven't learned C yet but I've read a book on C++ and it emphisized the introduction of new
> statements allowing for more "bug free" programming by constraining it to limit the uses.
> a prime example is the "goto" statement.. From what I've read it should be avoided as much as possible

Few self-respecting C programmers will use 'goto'.  :-)  I think the
ultimate answer to this question lies not in the language itself, but in
the programmer's use of the language.  It's just as easy to write
mangled C++ code as it is to write mangled C code, and it is
mathematically provable that anything written in C++ can be rewritten to
function identically in C.

Try both, see what you like the best, and work from there.

-- 
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|      John M. Aldrich       | "Autocracy is based on the assumption|
|       aka Fighteer I       | that one man is wiser than a million |
|   mailto:fighteer AT cs DOT com   | men.  Let's play that over again,    |
| http://www.cs.com/fighteer | too.  Who decides?"   - Lazarus Long |
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