Linked by David Adams on Thu 29th Sep 2011 23:47 UTC, submitted by lucas_maximus
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RE[5]: Misleading article title
by Slambert666 on Fri 30th Sep 2011 14:08
in reply to "RE[4]: Misleading article title"
RE[5]: Misleading article title
by TemporalBeing on Fri 30th Sep 2011 14:32
in reply to "RE[4]: Misleading article title"
"Step 1: Make it easy to program for Linux, using modern programming languages.
Last time I checked any programming language you can imagine usually gets Linux support first before anything else. As far as "modern" languages go:
C++11, Java7, Python3, Ruby19, Haskell, ..., etc.
If you're definition of "Modern" programming languages only consists of the latest and greatest iteration of C# then I guess I can see your point. But if you actually consider other modern languages then Linux definitely leads the pack in supported platforms. "
Just a slight correctino - if they considered a "Modern" programming language anything that comes from Microsoft (which would include C#) then I can concede point.
However, most "Modern" programming languages do not come from Microsoft, but from the other 99.999999999999% percent of the world.
RE[6]: Misleading article title
by JAlexoid on Fri 30th Sep 2011 14:55
in reply to "RE[5]: Misleading article title"
RE[5]: Misleading article title
by allanregistos on Mon 3rd Oct 2011 04:43
in reply to "RE[4]: Misleading article title"
"Step 1: Make it easy to program for Linux, using modern programming languages.
Last time I checked any programming language you can imagine usually gets Linux support first before anything else. As far as "modern" languages go:
C++11, Java7, Python3, Ruby19, Haskell, ..., etc.
If you're definition of "Modern" programming languages only consists of the latest and greatest iteration of C# then I guess I can see your point. But if you actually consider other modern languages then Linux definitely leads the pack in supported platforms. "
He might be thinking of a Visual Studio experience where almost everything were integrated. While I am not a developer in a sense of using Linux as my tools, I understand that Linux' dev tools are great, but not integrated. Ubuntu's quickly I think is an attempt to address this issue.





Member since:
2005-09-22
Last time I checked any programming language you can imagine usually gets Linux support first before anything else. As far as "modern" languages go:
C++11, Java7, Python3, Ruby19, Haskell, ..., etc.
If you're definition of "Modern" programming languages only consists of the latest and greatest iteration of C# then I guess I can see your point. But if you actually consider other modern languages then Linux definitely leads the pack in supported platforms.