On 11/8/2011 9:37 AM, Gor Gyolchanyan wrote:
Polluting keyword space is not a good idea unless it's impossible to interfere with identifiers. If keywords used a special syntax, like starting with a special character, then this wouldn't be an issue
The whole "too many keywords" issue strikes me as strange. English has over a million words in it. Who cares if a language uses 80 or 100 of them? What difference can it possibly make? How can an extra 20 words pollute the million word namespace (and not including any non-word identifiers (like inout))?
Another silly aspect of this issue is all keywords could be replaced by a sequence of special characters. For example, we could replace inout with ##. Voila! Less keywords! But is that better?
Keywords exist to make the language more readable. That's why we use inout instead of ##, and it's why we use + instead of add.
D is a rich language. That means it's going to have more syntax, more keywords and more symbols.
