--
Avdi
Good luck with maintenance.
Dan
--
We have not succeeded in answering all of our questions.
In fact, in some ways, we are more confused than ever.
But we feel we are confused on a higher level and about more important things.
-Anonymous
Perl? Maintenance? That's crazy-talk!
--
Avdi
Write everywhere, use once!
Now that is mean but I could not resist, sorry folks.
I hear its major ecological niche will be as a scripting language for
Duke Nukem Forever
martin
No, that's Arc.
--
CCD CopyWrite Chad Perrin [ http://ccd.apotheon.org ]
Ben Franklin: "As we enjoy great Advantages from the Inventions of
others we should be glad of an Opportunity to serve others by any
Invention of ours, and this we should do freely and generously."
--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky, FBG, AB, PTA, PGS, MS, MNLP, NST, ACMC(P)
http://borasky-research.blogspot.com/
If God had meant for carrots to be eaten cooked, He would have given rabbits fire.
. . and you think Duke Nukem Forever *will* be released? I'd think
the name -- Forever -- would be a clue.
--
CCD CopyWrite Chad Perrin [ http://ccd.apotheon.org ]
"The measure on a man's real character is what he would do
if he knew he would never be found out." - Thomas McCauley
In message "Re: Perl 6 (Was: Boy I love the Ruby community)"
on Tue, 6 Mar 2007 07:05:30 +0900, Chad Perrin <per...@apotheon.com> writes:
|> I hear its major ecological niche will be as a scripting language for
|> Duke Nukem Forever
|
|No, that's Arc.
The new site for Y Combinatior is written in Arc. It's working.
http://ycombinator.com/announcingnews.html
matz.
Excellent!
I joke about Arc being vaporware, but I'm pretty excited to see how it
turns out. Thanks for the information, Matz.
--
CCD CopyWrite Chad Perrin [ http://ccd.apotheon.org ]
This sig for rent: a Signify v1.14 production from http://www.debian.org/
And we were just saying how friendly this place was :-)
Adrian
'sokay. Perl hackers tend to have a good sense of humor, too.
By the way, my sig below is chosen randomly. You can blame my Perl sig
here on serendipity -- or on my computer.
--
CCD CopyWrite Chad Perrin [ http://ccd.apotheon.org ]
print substr("Just another Perl hacker", 0, -2);
I mentioned my theory at the last local ruby brigade get together that
the great thing about programming languages is that there are so many
of then that anyone can find at least a half-dozen or so that he can
hate without trying too hard. ;-)
Personally I just wonder, like Rodney King, "Why can't we just all get along?"
--
Rick DeNatale
My blog on Ruby
http://talklikeaduck.denhaven2.com/
Short answer: Love and money.
Long answer: http://steve.yegge.googlepages.com/bambi-meets-godzilla
Regards,
Dan
--
Giles Bowkett
http://www.gilesgoatboy.org
http://gilesbowkett.blogspot.com
http://giles.tumblr.com/
Of course I would prefer to write lots of Java for an interesting
project working with good people and as a side remark our Java code
might become pretty pretty ;), rather to work on a dull project in
Ruby.
However when I can chose the language for the project than I will not
hesitate to take Ruby.
Both cases are extremes of course.
Cheers
Robert
> My theory on this is that programmers don't know where they end and
> the language begins. If you're doing something interesting and
> challenging, the language won't matter. (Of course, I've been working
> exclusively with Ruby almost from the moment I discovered it, so I
> could just be completely full of BS there.)
[snip]
I have an entire lightning rant on that topic. I have a strong
dislike for "Foo Developer" as a job title (Foo == Perl/Ruby/Lisp/
whatever). It's limiting.
Adrian
It's terribly limiting, especially since anybody who's learned more
than a couple languages knows that picking up any given language is
not really so hard. Also the hiring priorities of a lot of companies
tend to actually favor cultural inbreeding, in that five years of
Python is somehow considered better than a year of Python, a year of
Perl, a year of Ruby, a year of Smalltalk, and a year of Erlang. In
fact a resume like that could have some real value to it, depending
very much on what the programmer actually **did** in those languages
(even though what the programmer did is often seen as less significant
than the language the programmer used at the time -- which has to be
one of the most bass-ackwards things on the planet).
However, if your job title really was "Foo Developer," that would make
for an entertaining business card.
It is very true and very sad. However there is really not much I feel
can be done, it is a mirror of the society, Do we have time to think?
No we do not, period, anyway thinking is not good for you :(
>
> However, if your job title really was "Foo Developer," that would make
> for an entertaining business card.
I will definitely ask for the knowledge of Foo(1) as a programming
language in the next job description I will file, this is a brilliant
idea.
>
> --
> Giles Bowkett
> http://www.gilesgoatboy.org
> http://gilesbowkett.blogspot.com
> http://giles.tumblr.com/
>
>
Cheers
Robert
(1) after checking and crosschecking that it really does not exist of course!
> However, if your job title really was "Foo Developer," that would make
> for an entertaining business card.
My IBM business card had my title as "Senior Smalltalk Guru"
> On 3/8/07, Giles Bowkett <gil...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> However, if your job title really was "Foo Developer," that would
>> make
>> for an entertaining business card.
>
> My IBM business card had my title as "Senior Smalltalk Guru"
Wandering off-topic - but I think my best job title was "Head
Techie". Still got the business cards somewhere :-)
Adrian
A friend of mine has "Test Pilot". That takes some beating.
--
Alex
My resume, at one time, said "Freelance Web Assassin". I actually got
work with that resume.
It also, at one point, listed among my "responsibilities" for military
experience in the work history section "responsible for the safety of
millions of Americans". That line was actually the one thing that got
me a job, once. I love hiring managers with a sense of humor.
--
CCD CopyWrite Chad Perrin [ http://ccd.apotheon.org ]
Leon Festinger: "A man with a conviction is a hard man to change. Tell
him you disagree and he turns away. Show him facts and figures and he
questions your sources. Appeal to logic and he fails to see your point."
Chad Perrin schrieb:
> On Sun, Mar 11, 2007 at 03:12:18AM +0900, Giles Bowkett wrote:
>
>> I had "Web Monkey" on business cards in 1997. (From an actual large
>> corporation, not just my own card.)
>>
>
>
I think , a „discussion“ like this - miles away from our interests and
(I hope intentions) -
will destroy this community. Normally I would call this fruitless and
SILLY !
Klaus