On 11/11/2013 09:28, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:

* Some languages are just fundamentally bad.

The flexible string representation is a perfect exemple.

Again, a short explanation:

This FSR splits unicode in chunks. Two immediate consequences:
- It's necessary to keep track of "each individual internal pieces of text".
- It's necessary to waste time in switching between the internal coding
schemes.

Bad memory and bad performance at the same time.


In fact, with such a mechanism, it is even impossible to write an editor.

jmf


For the benefit of newbies, lurkers or whatever please ignore the rubbish written by "Joseph McCarthy" Faust regarding PEP 393 and the Flexible String Representation. He keeps making these false claims in double spaced google crap despite having been shot down in this thread https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.lang.python/JkVQT0Wbq1A[1-25-false], where he was asked to provide evidence to support his claims. he didn't do so then, he's been asked repeatedly since to do so but hasn't because he can't, hence his newly aquired nickname.

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Mark Lawrence

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