A great comment, and I couldn't agree more. If the family computer in the early 90s didn't have QBasic - I wouldn't be a developer today. > more than ever, it's being taken up by people with no passion or desire to…
i don't have to move my hand any further than i would to press ctrl/alt
I don't program in functional environments, however this seems beautiful to me. I do understand your argument and tend to agree, I would like to see a syntax error if there is anything between the multiple lines of…
F# and OCaml are different languages with different goals. It should come as no surprise there are different sacrifices between the languages. Breaking compatibility with .NET, which is F#'s biggest benefit is counter…
That's nice in theory, but perhaps you have to change the logic of that SIS. Perhaps some parts need to be decommissioned, or added to. A security hot patch is needed or a backup taken. There are thousands of reasons…
A great comment, and I couldn't agree more. If the family computer in the early 90s didn't have QBasic - I wouldn't be a developer today. > more than ever, it's being taken up by people with no passion or desire to…
i don't have to move my hand any further than i would to press ctrl/alt
I don't program in functional environments, however this seems beautiful to me. I do understand your argument and tend to agree, I would like to see a syntax error if there is anything between the multiple lines of…
F# and OCaml are different languages with different goals. It should come as no surprise there are different sacrifices between the languages. Breaking compatibility with .NET, which is F#'s biggest benefit is counter…
That's nice in theory, but perhaps you have to change the logic of that SIS. Perhaps some parts need to be decommissioned, or added to. A security hot patch is needed or a backup taken. There are thousands of reasons…