There is a kind of mania for object-oriented programming at the moment, but
some of the smartest programmers I know are some of the least excited about it.
My own feeling is that object-oriented
progr...
Similar Articles (10 found)
π 69.9% similar
| |
1993
(This essay is from the introduction to On Lisp.)
It's a long-standing principle of programming style that the functional
elements of a progr...
π 69.4% similar
May 2002
"The quantity of meaning compressed into a small space by
algebraic signs, is another circumstance that facilitates
the reasonings we are acc...
π 68.1% similar
May 2001
(These are some notes I made
for a panel discussion on programming language design
at MIT on May 10, 2001.)
1. Programming Languages Are for ...
π 67.3% similar
April 2001
This essay developed out of conversations I've had with
several other programmers about why Java smelled suspicious. It's not
a critique of...
π 66.5% similar
August 2007
A good programmer working intensively on his own code can hold it
in his mind the way a mathematician holds a problem he's working
on. Mat...
π 66.4% similar
May 2001
(This article was written as a kind of business plan for a
new language.
So it is missing (because it takes for granted) the most important
f...
π 66.0% similar
May 2002
"We were after the C++ programmers. We managed to drag a
lot of them about halfway to Lisp."
- Guy Steele, co-author of the Java spec
|
|
In ...
π 65.7% similar
Kevin Kelleher suggested an interesting way to compare programming
languages: to describe each in terms of the problem it
fixes. The surprising thing ...
π 65.7% similar
If Youβre Going to Vibe Code, Why Not Do It in C?
Stephen Ramsay
Or hell, why not do it in x86 assembly?
Letβs get a few things out of the way before ...
π 65.4% similar
August 2004
In a recent talk I said something that upset a lot of
people: that you could get smarter programmers to work on
a Python project than you ...