(Sorry for the late reply)
On Tue, 16 Dec 2008, Andrew Coppin wrote:
Don Stewart wrote:
I think of Haskell more as a revolutionary movement
LOL! Longest revolution EVER, eh? I mean, how long ago was its dogma first
codified? ;-)
Remember: the eternal union of soviet socialist states lasted about 7
times as long as Hitler's thousand-year Reich (meanwhile, Jefferson's
temporary experiment still seems to be lurching along about as well as
ever). Nothing is as permanent as that which is declared temporary, and
nothing is as temporary as that which is declared permanent. Also,
constants aren't and variables don't.
The thing that saddens me is this:
http://prog21.dadgum.com/31.html
Basically, Haskell will never be popular, but its coolest ideas will be
stolen by everybody else and passed off as their own. :-(
We should be so lucky. My deepest fears is that Haskell doesn't become
popular *and* it's ideas aren't picked up by other languages.
Brian
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