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Date: | Tue, 7 Jul 2015 12:33:04 -0700 |
From: | Larry Doolittle <ldoolitt AT recycle DOT lbl DOT gov> |
To: | "Dave McGuire (mcguire AT neurotica DOT com) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com]" <geda-user AT delorie DOT com> |
Subject: | Re: [geda-user] gEDA/gschem still alive? |
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On Tue, Jul 07, 2015 at 03:12:52PM -0400, Dave McGuire (mcguire AT neurotica DOT com) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com] wrote: > All of that is purely subjective. FOR ME, yes, C is nearly the > ultimate in fun. My C code has far fewer bugs than my code in nearly > any other language, my code size (the binary...which is all that really > matters!) is a fraction of anything else, and "better"...well that just > spells "subjective" right there. There's a lot to like about Python etc. But C is an established ISO standard. I have C code that I wrote 20 years ago that runs flawlessly. Can't say that about Python. The best you can do is claim that since Python is open-source and written in C, you can freeze an arbitrary Python version and run it forever. But that is somewhat impractical, given the goals of grabbing python modules from wherever, and given the size of its code base. I'd like to see at least one of Python, Lua, Nim, Julia, ... reach the level of maturity and stability that we have in C today. But that clearly won't happen quickly. And it's hard to crystal-ball gaze and figure out which one deserves our brain cells today. For all the javascript bashing I heard here, I'd like to point out that it, too, shows up as an ISO/IEC standard. - Larry
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