oh man, that opens up a can of worms.  There will be those who say
that they're all the same at the assembly level, so no use arguing
which language is better or not.  These will be those who say they can
write "Hello World" program in python in 5 lines as opposed to Java's
10 lines.  There will be those who say they like python's scope
resolution by indention instead of curly braces.  Then there will be
those who disclaim both languages because they're both interpreted as
opposed to C/C++'s compiled.

But here's the bottom line.  You can drink Java but Python is much
harder to digest.

On Apr 29, 2:25 pm, Incognito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What does python give me that Java doesn't? Just curious.
>
> On Apr 29, 4:09 am, Michael Rueger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hong Ji wrote:
>
> > > Consider there are so many client/server Android applications, is it a
> > > good idea for all the ADC participants to receive the Google App Engine
> > > account invitations asap or at least to be included in the next 10,000
> > > invitations?
>
> > > Also, it will be great to see Java supported on Google App Engine
> > > (http://code.google.com/appengine/).
>
> > Forget it, Python is the new language du jour...
> > Java is so last millennium...
>
> > The next Android SDK version will probably be in Python too, that's why
> > it takes so long and they never care to fix critical bugs in the Java
> > version ;-)
>
> > Michael
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