Comment Yeah, Lisp is nice. (Score 1) 94
Yes, dynamic languages like Clojure are nice, but so are static ones. I actually consider Scala a dialect of ML, much in the way that Ruby is a dialect of Smalltalk.
Yes, dynamic languages like Clojure are nice, but so are static ones. I actually consider Scala a dialect of ML, much in the way that Ruby is a dialect of Smalltalk.
I think you misunderstood what bradley13 wrote. Java pre-constructs the low valued Integer objects, so that == and
Yes, one needs to demonstrate that Suzy is not doing her job. Documenting this requires actual effort on the part of Suzy's manager.
There is no need to make all Suzy's coworkers suffer. Unless the manager is taking a paycheck without actually managing, which is exactly what I'm arguing here.
Somebody somewhere in the organization is abusing the flexibility you all enjoy. So instead of addressing that one individual problem, management tried to "fix" the situation in the way you describe. This is simply management choosing not to do their jobs.
0x537461746943, what you have described is not quantum teleportation.
I think you may be confusing entanglement with quantum teleportation.
Kilobug, this is not so. Perhaps you are confusing entanglement with quantum teleportation.
Quantum teleportation requires that the sender perform measurements and send information to the receiver. The receiver uses this information to reconstruct the pre-measured state at her end.
But only one you can count.
One thing college teaches you is how to write coherent easy to comprehend statements.
I found my new definition of irony.
I think Tony Isaac meant "MS = Master's Degree", not "MS = Microsoft"
So, are you using RogueWave? STL? You get the idea. There is plenty new to learn.
Thanks, that was a cogent answer.
As somebody said here - java is the platform, not OS.
That was actually me quoting Stroustrup.
I feel that you were trying to be insulting.
To restate my question, why are you developing your apps on a different os than you are deploying?
That is an interesting perspective. Thanks for explaining it.
Actually,
if (conditionImLookingForIsFound())
doFoundThing();
else
doOtherThing();
is most readable. Keep all the code in view at the same level of abstraction.
Goto isn't used in Linux for performance reasons. It's used because C does not have exceptions and using goto to jump to clean-up code prevents code duplication. Any sufficiently experienced C programmer will encourage you to do the same.
Why not put the cleanup code in a well named function instead? Also, there are plenty of experienced C programmers who loathe gotos.
What is algebra, exactly? Is it one of those three-cornered things? -- J.M. Barrie