Am 15.11.2011 09:37, schrieb Peter Alexander:
A quick example (could be better) "D is a multi-paradigm, type-safe, natively compiled programming language with a focus on pragmatism. D programs run as fast as those written in C or C++ without the tedium of manual memory management, verbose syntax or unsafe semantics."
I like this (but maybe a short note that manual memory management and unsafe stuff is still possible).
"The D programming language. Modern convenience. Multi-paradigm power. Native efficiency." however sounds too buzzwordy IMHO. Regardless of the actual words used: This style of pseudo sentences only consisting of an adjective and a noun reminds me of annoying advertising slogans (there probably is a technical term for this, but I'm no linguist). And three of them in a row (or 4, if your count "The D programming language") hurt.
Two or three short sentences (in the style of Peter's suggestion) are still short enough that everybody reads them (maybe important parts could be emphasized for everybody who is too lazy to read whole sentences), contain more information and look more serious than a line of pseudo-sentences that sound like taken from a TV commercial.
Cheers, - Daniel
