Note, I said "I know". You may know more languages. Wander what the top 3 
are (if Julia isn't top 1).

Still, languages have died out (mostly) and I think we need fewer 
languages, not more.

I do not see a good reason for C++ any more (is the exception handling in 
Julia as least as good as C++/Java?). Just my preference. I would also 
think MATLAB is legacy (do not know APL..). With the endless 
bufferoverflows and security issues in general, C should be replaced as 
much as possible. Java isn't better in my view and just do not know C#. 
Maybe not as verbose.

Just do not know the pure functional languages really. Haskell is a 
minority language, maybe I should know more, just hope Julia is at least 
practically better. Do not really know Erlang, good for it's purpose, but 
couldn't Julia do as well (at the language level). What are the 
requirements really in that area? Just not convinced an obscure language 
there is better. Hard-realtime, Julia may not work - for now. Since Java 
can work there, Julia should to, but maybe something different is even 
better there. I assume no changes needed at the language level just 
improved GC, and it should be possible. Any reason why not?

Julia might have some safety issues, but I'm not too worried.

A little intrigued by Racket, but any (primarily) S-expression language, I 
just will not get mainstream.

-- 
Palli.

On Friday, December 26, 2014 10:50:58 PM UTC, Spencer Russell wrote:
>
> On Friday, December 26, 2014 5:32:39 PM UTC-5, Páll Haraldsson wrote:
>>
>>
>> Maybe I should just put my blinders on, just not look at other languages 
>> more. I'm pretty convinced all the others I know are obsolete (for new 
>> code).. I just might be missing something with the newer languages.
>>
>
> Julia is wonderful and in my top 3 favorite languages to code in, but 
> there's a lot to be learned from other languages. Also often different 
> circumstances call for different tools. I'd hesitate to make claims like 
> "all the others I know are obsolete" (I reserve that sort of hyperbole for 
> clickbait Wired headlines).
>

Reply via email to