Randall R Schulz wrote:
I think you might be misinterpreting that quotation. I read it as saying
that problems perceived in the older languages informed CLR and C# in
the sense that an understanding of those flaws and shortcomings allowed
them to be avoided or ameliorated in the newer design.
I know very little about CLR and C# nor have I ever heard of Anders
Hejlsberg, for what it's worth.
I think you're correct in your interpretation.
For the record, I've been at this for a while -- I wrote a C textbook
more than 20 years ago. However, I've also earned a good living for the
last 5 years writing commercial software in C#, and it has become my
all-time favorite programming language.
It's not something to be scorned simply because Microsoft developed it
(unless that's the guiding force in your life, I suppose).
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