Unless you are using a framework like Twisted, where all potentially blocking 
operations are handled by passing in a function to be called when the operation 
is complete, so that the stack trace is non-existent.  This way you get both 
the joy of working with a language where simple mistakes won't be caught 
automatically until they cause a failure at runtime *and* the joy of not having 
traces that tell you exactly what led up to an error.  Fun times.

Not that I'm bitter...  :-)

Cheers,
Greg

On Jun 12, 2010, at 2:50 PM, Marc Weber wrote:

>  Ruby, Java, PHP, Python.. may win here because you have stack traces.
>  However I bet errors are much more likely to happen

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