On Thu, Sep 6, 2012 at 8:26 PM, Weber, Martin S <martin.we...@nist.gov> wrote:
> The question that's left for me is: why vectors and lists? I mean, from a 
> data format perspective, and a non-clojure implementor, I'm not sure the 
> distinction makes sense. After all for the _data format_, in its serialized 
> form, the vector will not be a random access structure. It has to be 
> deserialized, and access to an element will have linear time complexity. 
> Again, I understand its relevance from the clojure perspective. Is this just 
> "too important" for edn's current "implementor", clojure ?

I think it's a useful hint to allow sequences of data that can be
inflated into data structures supporting random access in constant
time vs those that don't. Many languages have both list-like
collections AND array-like collections.
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/
World Singles, LLC. -- http://worldsingles.com/

"Perfection is the enemy of the good."
-- Gustave Flaubert, French realist novelist (1821-1880)

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