On Sunday, 17 July 2016 at 02:17:52 UTC, Andrew Godfrey wrote:
On Saturday, 16 July 2016 at 21:35:41 UTC, Walter Bright wrote:
On 7/16/2016 6:09 AM, Andrew Godfrey wrote:
Walter called Prolog "singularly useless". You have been referring to changes that would amount to a new major version of D as "a cleanup". From the forums, my sense is that there IS a groundswell of opinion, that D2 has some major mistakes in it that can't be rectified without doing a D3, and there's a strong reaction to that idea based on experience with D1 -> D2. Perhaps what is needed is a separate area for discussion about ideas that would require a major version change. The thing about that is that it can't be done incrementally; it's the rare kind of thing that would need to be planned long in advance, and would have to amount to a huge improvement to justify even considering it.

I agree that D2 has made some fundamental mistakes. But it also got a great deal right.

I haven't banned Ola from the forums, he has done nothing to deserve that. He's welcome to post here, and others are welcome to engage him.

I'm more interested in engaging on "in how many years will the D leadership be interested in engaging on the topic of D3?" I feel this is a significant omission from the vision doc, and that omission inflames a lot of the recurring animosity I see on the forums. Even an answer of "never" would be a significant improvement over "we refuse to engage on that". And I doubt you're really thinking "never".

I do think that ideas from academia will mostly cause a lot of unwanted noise in such a discussion - because academia, in my experience, is more focused on "software construction" than on "software evolution", and D takes an approach that is built on practical experience with evolution. But academia also has occasional nuggets of extreme value.

The question is what is D3 supposed to be? I'm neither for nor against D3, it pops up every once in a while when people are not happy with a feature. My questions are:

1. Is there any clear vision of what D3 should look like?

2. What exactly will it fix?

3. Is there a prototype (in progress) to actually prove it will fix those things?

4. If there is (real) proof[1], would it justify a break with D2 and risk D's death?

I think this topic is too serious to be just throwing in (partly academic) ideas that might or might not work in the real world. It's too serious to use D as a playground and later say "Ah well, it didn't work. [shrug]". D has left the playground and can no longer afford to just play around with ideas randomly. One has to be realistic.

I'd also like to add that if we had a "clean and compact" D3, it would become more complex over time and people would want D4 to solve this, then D5 and so forth. I haven't seen any software yet that hasn't become more complex over time.

Last but not least, it would help to make a list of the things D2 got right to put the whole D3 issue into proportion.

[1] I.e. let's not refer to other languages in an eclectic manner. I'm asking for a proof that D works as D3 and is superior to D2.

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