On 11/3/07, Vivek Khurana <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Nov 2, 2007 5:38 PM, ಓಂ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Actually I think we need not worry much about M$, because they will > > dig their own resting place as the time passes... for all we know they > > may have started in that direction with launch of Vista... > > > > Not really, if you carefully look at the XP licencing M$ is forcing an > upgrade.
Which is going to work in Linux's favour because with upgrade old hardware will not work the way people expect due to enhanced hardware requirements. While Linux will not require you to upgrade hardware... > > > > 1. Define output expected (expected output) ... > > 2. Check everybody's program... if it meets the requirement of > > expected output then they get passing grade > > 3. Count number of lines of actual code (excluding comments) in the > > working program submitted and person whose code has minimum number of > > lines gets highest grade... > > Point 3. is not a good criteria. Less lines of code doesnt mean good > code. Its is not that easy. > Secondly defining expected output is not easy (also not possible) at times. Try writing smallest code snippet for any given program output... you will realise it is not easy to write a *small* program that meets and does what it is expected to do... It is assumed here that only those programs which catch and handle exceptions properly will be compared... so this is like "best among equals" kind of strategy...
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