A fork doesn't integrate 2 programs together but rather creates 2 separately
executing programs.

 

My system compiles faster than the source can be saved to disk and can
integrate seamlessly into the function you are currently executing.  Linking
when required is done very fast, late and invisibly.  On my system,
compiling and linking are so fast and invisible that you could say there is
none.

 

I understand that my language flexibility underwhelms you but a programmer
rarely envisions solutions using tools he doesn't have.  I think it no small
feat that my system can have a fully encapsulated OOP system where the
functions exist right next to the data they work on AND have SQL
functionality at the same time on the same data. Wikipedia has an article
where this is argued to be impossible.  I have an article on my web site
about RDMS and my system if you are interested.

 

In 1990, most mainframe programmers said that Relational Database Systems
were children's toys.  They said the same thing about microcomputers.  You
have to go a long way to find a none RDMS system today and our micro
computers are more powerful than the mainframes of 1990.

 

Larry Ellison (Oracle) was nobody in 1990 but today he is one of the richest
men in the world because of RDMS databases.

 

David

 

PS In 1987, I developed a "somewhat" compatible, dBase II, byte code
interpreter.  I was told by many people that nobody would want it, blah blah
blah.  Sold over 30,000 copies in less than 1 year.

 

 

From: Aaron Hosford [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: January-10-13 4:25 PM
To: AGI
Subject: Re: [agi] Why Logic & Maths Have Sweet FA to do with Real world
reasoning

 

I suppose you could even just call fork to call the C compiler from C, to
produce a DLL which can then be accessed by the same program. It's just a
matter of writing a library once to do it, and you're set from then on.

 




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