[ale] good website for novice learning Java ?
Charles Shapiro
hooterpincher at gmail.com
Thu Oct 12 15:25:30 EDT 2006
Heh. One of the primary reasons I took the gig I'm on now was the chance to
use python in the real trenches
(Plus of course it's on the subway..). It's very khoul & fun to code in --
I've also got a recreational site done in it
( http://tomshiro.org/sudoku-grinder/html/ ). I've written enough java to
know I don't like it. When I have to use the JVM I write jython.
I once told a boss of mine about Phil Greenspun's comment that 'Java is the
SUV of programming tools'
(
http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/philg/2003/09/20/java-is-the-suv-of-programming-tools/).
He indignantly responded that he drove an SUV, and they were wonderful
things. Kind of missed the point, I thought.
-- CHS
On 10/12/06, Mike Harrison <meuon at geeklabs.com> wrote:
>
> > supposed to be pure OOP where python is not.
>
> I've only written and worked with a little Python,
> and what made it workable for me was that it was
> NOT "pure OOP". It allowed a mostly procedural thinking
> geek like me to quickly do what I needed to do.
>
> What makes Perl, Python, PHP (and others) really useful is they
> try NOT to force too much abstract architecture to everything.
> It's about getting a job done, quickly, efficiently and as safely
> as possible. PHP wins in my book just because of it's broad and deep
> installed base, it's -everywhere-.
>
>
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>
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