No, I hate C and will never use it again in my entire life unless forced to at the point of a gun.

You're point? :-P

Regards,

John A. De Goes
N-BRAIN, Inc.
The Evolution of Collaboration

http://www.n-brain.net    |    877-376-2724 x 101

On Feb 26, 2009, at 1:17 PM, Jonathan Cast wrote:

On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 13:18 -0700, John A. De Goes wrote:
Are you saying has been no progress since K&R C in the number of
libraries available to C programmers? And that C programmers still
have to edit files with vi and compile and link by specifying all
files on the command-line?

You may disagree, but the evidence points in the opposite direction.
There are tens of thousands of robust C libraries available to suit
any particular programming need. Many of Haskell's own libraries are
based on C versions. Tool support for the C language (not for some
successor you might think would exist if the language continued
evolving) can detect memory leaks, detect memory overwrites, apply
dozens of automatic refactorings to C large-scale C programs, etc.

Library and tool support for the C language is light years beyond
Haskell. It wouldn't be there if we had been through 20 iterations of
C each completely breaking backward compatibility.

Maybe you should use C then?

jcc



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