Claus Reinke wrote:
>As for me, i'm really NOT interested in knowing "what langage is good for go
>programming". That's simply not a question i can ask myself, nor anyone else.
> This question doesn't make any sense for me. Still if someone can get the
>"standard light playout" right in less than 10 code line, and they are very
>understandable lines. I would be very happy to see it. But it would never
>mean for me that, "this language is BEST". Even if the peformances are
>optimal there. I think 90% of the "this language is the best" debate gets it's
>root in some affective part of the people engaged with it.

If, instead of asking what is the best language for writing a strong Go playing
program, we ask what is the best language for clealry expressing the rules of Go
(recognizing and scoring legal games), then I think Haskell
(http://www.haskell.org/)
deserves some consideration. See my attempt at

http://www.cwi.nl/~tromp/go/Go.hs

Such programs go a long way toward removing all ambiguity from informal
(e.g. English language) rule statements.

regards,
-John
_______________________________________________
computer-go mailing list
computer-go@computer-go.org
http://www.computer-go.org/mailman/listinfo/computer-go/

Reply via email to