Hi Jean-Luc:
Did you make Sound RTS in python? That is cool if you did, the capabilities 
it has (such as multiplayer games) are awesome.

Regards,
Tristan Bussiere

Owner, ACE Games
http://www.acegamesonline.net
Skype: Tristanbussiere
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "SoundMUD" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Gamers Discussion list" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, September 03, 2007 3:45 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] What is the most easy to use programming language?


> Hi,
>
> I would say Python too. But I don't know what you intend to do. I should 
> write a
>
> A problem with Python for blind programmers is probably the way blocks
> are defined. There are no braces or Endif keywords. You must use 4
> spaces indentations to define blocks. This is very nice for sighted
> programmers, because it removes the redundancy between braces and
> indentation, so you cannot be mistaken by a bad indentation. But for a
> blind programmer, I don't know it is slightly annoying or really
> annoying. Somebody in another thread said that with a braille terminal
> it is not too bad, but I wonder how annoying it is with a synthesizer.
>
> An interesting thing is that, like in BASIC interpreters, you can
> write commands in interactive mode and have instantly the result of
> each line, so it is nice when you learn (and later too).
>
> Even if you don't use it for faster programs, Python may be useful for
> quickly written scripts that you will use once. And learning it may
> not take too much time. A tutorial is provided with the documentation,
> or at http://docs.python.org/tut/tut.html
>
> Jean-Luc
>
> PS
>
> About object-oriented programming, with Python you can write a program
> without defining new classes, but if the program grows larger you can
> define them too. And while you are writing your first less than 10
> lines scripts, you will probably use classes and objects from the
> existing modules.
>
> For example, to print the content of a file called test.txt, you can
> write for example:
> f = file("test.txt")
> print f.read()
> In this example you have created a file object called "f"
> corresponding to the existing "test.txt" file, and you used the "read"
> method of this object to get the content of the file and print the
> returned string. Note that you don't need to know how the file object
> does this internally. Sorry for this probably confusing example.
>
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