Daniel S. Wilkerson wrote: > It is doubtful we shall have compilers that can tell you for example, > that you used the wrong algorithm. Right. I think that's what Schwern was getting at, when he said > > > > Type checking is nice, but its just one class of error-checking. > By preventing lots of little gotchas, you free the mind to pay attention > to what it is doing rather than the most minute details of how to do > it. This is a quite powerful effect. Interesting you should mention this. It is, without a doubt, the main reason we like to program in Perl, instead of in low-level languages like Fortran and Java. And it may explain why programs written in Perl -- dynamic, weakly-typed though it be -- are at least no more buggy than programs written in low-level languages. But I think we've strayed into the topic of advocacy. -- John Porter "Anything essential is invisible to the eyes."
- Re: Properties and stricture Daniel S. Wilkerson
- Re: Properties and stricture Simon Cozens
- Re: Properties and stricture John Porter
- Re: Properties and stricture Daniel S. Wilkerson
- Re: Properties and stricture Michael G Schwern
- Re: Properties and stricture Daniel S. Wilkerson
- Re: Properties and stricture Daniel S. Wilkerson
- Re: Properties and stricture Michael G Schwern
- Re: Properties and stricture John Porter
- Re: Properties and stricture Peter Scott
- DANGER! ADVOCACY! (was Re: Properties and stricture) John Porter
- DANGER! ADVOCACY! (was Re: Properties and stric... Michael G Schwern
- Re: Properties and stricture Michael G Schwern
- Re: Properties and stricture Daniel S. Wilkerson
- Re: Properties and stricture Michael G Schwern
- Re: Properties and stricture Damien Neil
- Re: Properties and stricture Piers Cawley
- Re: Properties and stricture John Porter
- Re: Properties and stricture Me
- Re: Properties and stricture David L. Nicol
- Re: Properties and stricture Dave Storrs