Öö Tiib wrote:
> On Wednesday, 12 June 2013 08:56:49 UTC+3, Enue wrote:
>> Help me with this.
>
> OK. But what help you need exactly?
>
>> People still buy "books" (made of paper?). But technical
>> books?
>
> Books are media to pass information. Books made of paper are not best
> for everything but are more convenient than alternatives in several
> senses. Lot of people read books made of paper. There are several
> bookstores in every major city on Earth.
>
>> Is this Bjarne's worst night mare: that his intellectual offerings
>> would stagnate with a peutrid programming language?
>
> C++ is programming language. Programming languages are tools for
> writing software. C++ is not best tool for designing every software
> but is more convenient than alternatives for several purposes so it
> is widely used.
>
>> He went from "engineer" at AT&T, to academia, right? Anyone else
>> wanna know about that? I do.
>
> He is a man who has done something during his life.
Translated: you couldn't program yourself out of a paper bag, but someone
else showed you any way to do it and now you're kinda good at doing that.
This has nothing to do with BS, it's all about you, ya know. No need for
introspection, just face reality. The reality is that your whole life is a
lie because you chose to follow blindly, or, and more likely, chose to join
a gang. Move to San Diego, it's the gangbanger capital of the world. Ya
think? Or am I "just spoutin'" nonsense all the time?
> He has designed
Nuh uh! C++ was anything BUT designed. Even BS will tell you that. It was
just a quick hack he did while "under the direction" of some IT PMB.
Engineering went out before the C++ was delivered. It was a
cultural/societal change. In retrospect, we now know what 20 years of
politics at the forefront result in (not that 3000 years of history before
that showed any different result).
> a (quite popular)
That has some merit, to some. It's easy to herd sheep(le)?
> programming language
He didn't really do that though.
> and has written some (quite
> popular) books
Let me count the number of them: 2.
> about it.
Believe you me, I appreciate the opportunity of that decades-long lapse in
writing of significant books. I know what to do NOW, but surely others do
too or are actually DOING IT NOW AND HAVE THE RESOURCES TO DO IT NOW.
Which get's us back to you: what's your problem, "programmer"? Can't program
yourself out of a paper bag?
> There are lot of other books and programming
> languages so whatever you have done (or not done) during your life is
> not fault of his.
"Nice try" at trying to move your own failure/failings upon me, but I can't
help you with that, biotch, ya know?