> I'm not creating a new language - this wouldn't remove anything from Perl > nor from other languages and thus would be extremaly hard to ruin the whole > perl with this.
I wasn't implying that you were trying to create a new langauge. I am simply pointing out that there are a huge number of languages out there which were experimental in nature and very innovative. Some of them -- like java -- are still around. Some of them are either no longer used, not used in production environments, or just toys. Take Haskell for instance. You can return functions from functions and other things. Is this useful for some projects? Probably. Am I going to switch to Haskell because of this? No. > This only would add possibility to use those values but You could just write > code and use old scripts like before - and maybe use these few revolutionaly > :) commands too. Yes, but I am saying it depends on how useful it is to the average programmer and how easily it cleans up the code to see whether or not it is worth adding. The paradigm is intriguing, but will it really cause enough of a difference in the way we code that it will cause sweeping changes. Good luck with it though. I would love it if you managed to come up with something to make coding more efficient. -Dan -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]