Reports of my demise are been greatly exaggerated.

On Thu, Mar 1, 2018 at 3:02 PM, Jose Mario Quintana <
[email protected]> wrote:

> > Roger Hui himself seems to have abandonned J (correct me if I am
> mistaken), in favor of Dyalog APL. I can
>
> He has been with Dyalog APL for several years (AFAIK); he still contributes
> to the forums from time to time (although the Dyalog APL influence is
> noticeable sometimes).
>
> > Since I seem to be by far the youngest person with a serious interest in
> J, I will try to explain my > understanding of the current situation, in
> the hope that it may be useful to jsoftware.
>
> There is another young person (from my perspective anyway), Marshall
> Lochbaum, with an impressive expertise in J and the J Source but he is now
> (AFAIK) with...  Dyalog APL!  He also still contributes to the forum
> occasionally.
>
> I remember overhearing a bunch of world gurus a few decades ago discussing,
> while having coffee, tea, and pastries, what needed to be done to advance
> in the long run what they believed was a superior but grossly
> under-utilized paradigm.  What was their conclusion?  It was hopeless to
> try to convince the rival professors and industry practitioners, they had
> invested too much in an alternative paradigm.  However, they would
> eventually die; the focus should be on the younger generations.  (I doubt
> the strategy was a new one.)
>
> To attract younger generations one should try to see things from their
> perspective.  At the very least you have provided a sample.  Thanks for
> taking the time for doing so.
>
> On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 9:40 PM, james faure <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > Andrew Dabrowski is right. If J continues to steer it's current course,
> it
> > will be quickly forgotten. Roger Hui himself seems to have abandonned J
> > (correct me if I am mistaken), in favor of Dyalog APL. I can vouch from
> > first hand experience how incredibly difficult it is to interest my
> friends
> > in J and in fact have yet to get a single other person from Epitech
> > http://international.epitech.eu/ to learn J, even though I believe they
> > are convinced of it's power.
> >
> > Epitech International<http://international.epitech.eu/>
> > international.epitech.eu
> > Dear International Students, We will be happy to welcome you to Epitech
> > and hope you will enjoy this unique learning experience! Epitech has
> > solidified its reputation ...
> >
> >
> >
> > Since I seem to be by far the youngest person with a serious interest in
> > J, I will try to explain my understanding of the current situation, in
> the
> > hope that it may be useful to jsoftware. I also must say that between the
> > time that I heard of J and commited to learning it, I was extremely
> unsure
> > about whether the language would have a future and whether it would be
> > suitable to do everything. Ultimately, Henry Rich's success story is the
> > reason I am here, without it I would probably still be wondering to
> myself
> > from time to time about J, but without the conviction that it is
> suitable,
> > or worth learning. Project Euler also played a big part, and seems to be
> > the main place where people first hear about J nowadays. And even with
> > those conditions being met, If I learned J, it is only because I am both
> > extremely determined, and was able to complete school projects with
> plenty
> > of spare time. I have shown J to many people at Epitech, but I remain the
> > only person who uses it, most of those people never made it past the
> first
> > few steps. The learning curve has to be reduced, and it must be done so
> in
> > the style of this decade. As an aside, on proofreading this, some of my
> > statements are harsh, so please keep in mind they are not criticisms,
> more
> > like a plea for help on J's behalf. Also please do not think me arrogant
> > because of my convictions. I am well aware that I am not affiliated with
> > nor in charge of jsoftware.
> >
> > My initial statement at the beginning of the long thread in the source
> > forum about generators expressed my surprise at J's lack of optimization
> > for such a simple case as '>:i.1000x'. I have mentionned multiple times
> > that extended precision calculations are simply far too slow, and this
> has
> > even threatened my desire to continue with J by throwing some serious
> > doubts on it's ability to satisfy my needs. But the greatest threat to
> J's
> > existence is it's complete failure to keep up with modern trends:
> >
> >
> > 0 The name 'J' is now exposed as being idiotic - it is very difficult to
> > make google understand what one means by 'J'. In fact I am forced to
> > preface every google search with 'site:jsoftware', which is no doubt
> > sufficiently annoying to put off many people. The language must be
> renamed.
> >
> > 1 The website looks decades old, and it is difficult to find things. Some
> > people I have shown J to abandonned the attempt after a bare minute of
> > visiting it.
> >
> > 2 Stack Overflow, and more generally Q&A resources are extremely popular
> > nowadays, most people are simply too lazy to read documentation and will
> > always try to formulate their question to google first. Should this prove
> > unsuccessful, they are often much less motivated to continue. J has
> almost
> > no presence on SO.
> >
> > 3 The Foreign's in J and the interface to this are frankly an
> abherration:
> > nobody wants to have to learn or look up all the time how to activate
> this
> > and that foreign, and there is no reason why they shouldn't all have much
> > more logical names. In the same vein: the o. family must be given logical
> > names like 'cos' 'sin' etc.. The concern of polluting the namespace is a
> > miniscule one. I also would urge everyone to stop using phrases like '2
> o.
> > y', and '6!:2' etc.. but for that to happen, these need standard default
> > names, even multiple aliases. Noone cares nowadays about the miniscule
> > performance loss associated with having multiple equivalent names, the
> > possibility of guessingand have it work anyway is far more important.
> >
> > 4 The SC based system has has got to go.. A modern program should
> > certainly not depend on strict formulation rules in order to run
> optimally
> >
> > 5 Information needs to be presented differently, and in a way more in
> > keeping with modern trends for webdesign. NuVoc is magnificent, and I
> very
> > much appreciate the significant effort that has gone into explaining J,
> but
> > the website's overall presentation is not good.
> >
> > 6 People nowadays are too lazy to download the qtide and try the labs,
> > (not my learning style but for sure they are valuable)
> >
> > 7 Why isn't there an online Jconsole that can be used interactively, on
> > jsoftware's frontpage ?? The closest thing I could find is the 3rd party
> > https://tio.run/#j
> >
> > This comes back to the concept that If Newcomers are not sufficiently
> > hooked in within 5 seconds, you lose them forever.
> >
> > 8 There must be bulitin help in the jconsole. Even if it bloats the
> > binary, builtin help is obligatory for J. (something like help '/' should
> > print some example uses of insert and a brief summary)
> >
> > 9 Error messages are incomprehensible to newcomers (why does 'Rank error'
> > not also print the offending verb, it's rank, and the offending nouns +
> > their ranks ?) - experienced users are happy to use the debug interface,
> > but this shouldn't be necessary.
> >
> > 10 The Jsources are written in a magnificent style, but need many more
> > explanations (I understand the jdevs are aware of this).
> >
> > 11 Developping J-otherlang communication is a good idea, but given the
> > current situation it feels like an admission of defeat.
> >
> >
> > Maybe there is no solution for J. Perhaps the timing is wrong, and it
> must
> > lie dormant, biding it's time before one day in the future rising up
> again,
> > in a new form. All we can do now is believe J is worth fighting for.
> >
> > I close this by saying I have the utmost respect for all Jers, but things
> > must change, and radically if J is to live.
> >
> > J4
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> > For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
----------------------------------------------------------------------
For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm

Reply via email to