Le 29.08.2013 01:13, Cousin Stanley a écrit :
Ralf Mardorf wrote:
....
Assembler always is optimized code.
Not always .... :-)
One can also write stinky code in assembler.
Like any programming language,
some programmers are better at it
than others ....
--
Stanley C. Kitching
Human Being
Phoenix, Arizona
This is something I understood very recently, and the reason for which
I stopped to aggressively disdain Java and C#. The problem is not the
language, it's the language's user. Always. If eclipse is slow, huge and
buggy (in my experience, 2 years ago, it was.), it's not because it's
written in Java, there are very good programs written in Java, and in
Debian, you can find games with graphics of 90s, written in C or C++,
which are slow as hell on a modern computer.
And nowadays compilers can make code better optimized than you could,
too. The question is, what is real optimization? Speed? Size? How many
of one? Or of both?
Before that, I learn that it was not windows itself which was buggy,
but the softwares I was using. I discovered that last one when I
discovered linux, and had some crashes ;)
Sounds like it's easy to say it's the language/OS 's fault, and never
the programmer's one. Probably easy, but so often wrong.
I think time made me wiser on those points. (funny to notice that when
I was a windows users, I was used to write "window$" and "M$" and other
insulting transformations which are far worse. Stopped that by
discovering another OS.)
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