On 9/27/06, Russell Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

To me, this was a poor design decision.


I think you ought to try it before you condemn it.

I can't see NASA using Python for
anything . . . "Well, the reason the first human mission to Mars failed was
because someone accidentally deleted a Tab character, didn't notice it, and
the landing program behaved differently than originally speced out."

That's just FUD. Every language fails if you don't include the right
semicolon, comma, etc.

Here's fact:

"NASA is using Python to implement a CAD/CAE/PDM repository and model
management, integration, and transformation system which will be the
core infrastructure for its next generation collaborative engineering
environment. We chose Python because it provides maximum productivity,
code that's clear and easy to maintain, strong and extensive (and
growing!) libraries, and excellent capabilities for integration with
other applications on any platform. All of these characteristics are
essential for building efficient, flexible, scalable, and
well-integrated systems, which is exactly what we need. Python has met
or exceeded every requirement we've had," said Steve Waterbury,
Software Group Leader, NASA STEP Testbed.

Source: http://www.python.org/Quotes.html

--
Ted Roche
Ted Roche & Associates, LLC
http://www.tedroche.com


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