That would be horribly inconsistent with the rest of Clojure, IMO: 

Sure it will be. That is why I said this is an academic one, and I don't 
expect any change to current one.


> Warren, this and some of your other issues with how Clojure works 
> makes me curious about your language background. May I ask what 
> languages you're most used to? That may help us frame future 
> discussions about differences in opinion about features in Clojure. 
>

Gee, seems like an interview question. :-) Sure, if it helps us understand 
each other better, why not (am I so different from others?)

My daily language at work is C++/C.
My language for non mission critical tasks (testing, utilities and etc) is 
Python.
My hobby language is Elisp (and also a necessity for my Emacs configs)
I played with Common Lisp for a while and gave it up (too much historical 
baggage, and also terrible eco-system)
I read books on Ruby but never used it.
10 years ago I was designing Java interfaces (via JCP process) for an 
industry consortium, but since then I have never used it.

I am very interested in Clojure and am thinking about using it in a kind-of 
mission critical project (except my mission is not well defined yet).

So that is it.

-- 
> Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN 
> An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/ 
> World Singles, LLC. -- http://worldsingles.com/ 
>
> "Perfection is the enemy of the good." 
> -- Gustave Flaubert, French realist novelist (1821-1880) 
>

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