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- Path: bclark.is.ge.com!bclark
- From: bclark@bclark.is.ge.com (Brian Clark)
- Newsgroups: comp.lang.misc,comp.lang.perl.misc,comp.lang.tcl,comp.lang.c,comp.lang.java
- Subject: Re: Readable Perl (was: Re: Relative Speed of Perl vs. Tcl vs. C)
- Date: 11 Mar 1996 23:51:01 GMT
- Organization: GE Information Services, Inc.
- Message-ID: <4i2e95$sjo@luss.is.ge.com>
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-
- William Ware (wware@xionics.com) wrote:
- : Glen C. Perkins (gperkins@netcom.com) wrote:
- : : [ Arguing the merits of languages ] has a great deal of utility.
- : : ...
- : : I *love* to hear (read) two people who really know a lot
- : : about a language, but have different
- : : opinions, fight it out.
- : : Keep up the preaching!
-
- : Subsequent comments to this seemed to miss what I think was
- : the real point, and what I found a lot more interesting than
- : whether the writer continues to use C. I can only compare
- : this to an experience I had (unrelated to languages per se).
- : I had gotten really interested in installing the Linux OS on
- : my home PC, and I wanted to hear some experienced people
- : describe what they found fascinating and useful about Linux,
- : what causes it to inspire such passion. Having that conversation
- : with the Linux community was like pulling teeth! There are
- : all these people who find Linux utterly fascinating, but who
- : were completely unwilling to try to articulate that. Maybe it
- : was because they smelled a newbie, and thought I didn't deserve
- : to know why Linux was good, but it's hard to believe they'd
- : all think that way. It's a curious thing to me that people
- : should develop such intense passions and then be unwilling to
- : share their enthusiasm, perhaps only because the listener hasn't
- : jumped thru the same hoops they did. Just fascinating.
-
- I think you are on the right path here. I recently installed Linux on
- my home PC (to accompany Win95) and I started reading some of the Linux
- newsgroups. I get the immpression that some of the Linux fanatics feel
- some sence of power and superiority for having tackled the challenge
- installing and maintaining it. No one ever says it out right, but
- critisms of other pc OS's (win95, OS2) often echo that underlying tone.
- Please note the keyword "some" though. Many other Linux folks are quite
- helpful and encourageing to the newbie.
- With languages, it seems like the same attitude, but I think the
- motivations are different. I am currently programming a rather large
- cgi system...primarily in Perl. I catch myself "feeling" like perl is
- the greatest programming language in the world. I know in another nine
- months I will probably "feel" like C++ or Java or some other unknown
- lang are the greatest in the world because that's what I'm doing, at
- the time. I've never experienced a situation where I'm programming in
- the same langauge for a long period of time (the vagabond lifestyle of
- consulting) but I imagine if I did, my brain would adjust to it to the
- point where nothing else seemed like it could possibly be as good.
- I believe this motivates some of the "fanatic" language advocacy we
- that's so common on USENET.
-
- BC
-