Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon.

Pages: 1-

Go

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 2:41

Could Go replace C? Does Go truly combine efficient compilation, efficient execution, and ease of use?

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 2:46

Could Quantum TURBOPASCAL replace C? Does Quantum TURBOPASCAL truly combine efficient compilation, efficient execution, and ease of use?

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 3:00

>>2
You aren't funny.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 3:06

>>3
;_;

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 3:24

GOTO CONSIDERED HARMFUL!

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 3:27

>>5
goto bed

Name: ;_; 2013-03-19 3:33

B-but...if you w-want to k-know...any language that uses garbage collection is not a replacement to c. The replacements to c are just a little higher level, or just a little lower, or are stuffed with additional features while remaining at the same level, or address every level there is by giving you a high level language that lets you cut down lower if you want to. If you can't express a variable's extent being directly tied to the duration of its scope when it is possible for the value to escape the scope, then it ain't a replacement to c.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 3:56

>>7
So GCC's extension that allows closures isn't C ?

Name: Mr. Wonderful 2013-03-19 3:57

No, no, no, and no! :-)

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 4:14

>>9
A truly Functional argument.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 4:21

>>8
Those nested functions don't have dynamic extent. But in any case, of course it isn't C. U HAVNT RED DA FUCKIN STANDARD!

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 4:40

>>1,7
If ALGOL68, ALGOLW, Pascal, and *LISP* couldn't, why do you think Go will?

Technical argument:
too broken, does not meet documentation in many parts, not portable enough, needs better IO.

ATS, Haskell, and Scheme are better candidates.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 5:02

Go? More like Slow.

Name: Anonymous 2013-03-19 5:11

>>13
Glow, Ho ho ht°
F̡͠Ţ҉F̕Y̵͟

Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List