2009/6/23 Hal Vaughan <h...@halblog.com>: > > On Jun 22, 2009, at 10:35 PM, 明覺 wrote: > >> 2009/6/23 Napoleon <rri0...@attglobal.net>: >>> >>> 明覺 wrote: >>>> >>>> On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 10:18 PM, John Hasler<jhas...@debian.org> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> 明覺 writes: >>>>>> >>>>>> yes, currently it's true, but I hope one day I will be able to take >>>>>> full >>>>>> control of my system, and modify them as i like, if I have those other >>>>>> language programmed softwares installed in my system, it will be hard >>>>>> to >>>>>> maintain for me. >>>>> >>>>> If learning enough of another language to do maintainence is hard for >>>>> you >>>>> you aren't much of a programmer. Programming is not about knowing a >>>>> language. >>>> >>>> Yes, language is just a tool, so I want to keep my tool simple and >>>> powerful, I do not want so many similar tools with the same functions. >>> >>> What you haven't learned is there are different languages FOR A REASON! >>> No one language is "best" for everything. For instance - I can code >>> web pages in C/C++ - but it is much faster for me to do it in PHP, Perl >>> or Java. The same is true with anything else. >>> >>> I've got over 40 years of programming experience; in that time I've >>> forgotten more languages than you have ever learned. Some no longer >>> even exist. But every one of them had certain advantages and >>> disadvantages - and those differences were a major reason why the >>> languages were chosen for their particular projects. >>> >>> You don't like the way different languages handle strings - well, guess >>> what. If they all did everything the same way, they wouldn't be >>> different languages! >>> >>> To be blunt (like others) - so you don't like the fact different >>> languages are being used on your system. There is no way you're going >>> to be able to rewrite all that code in C/C++ in your lifetime. >>> >>> So you have two choices. You can accept that fact and continue to >>> learn, using the tools available to you, no matter what language, just >>> like the rest of us do. >>> >>> Or, you can continue to bitch about it and make yourself miserable. In >>> this case, I suggest you try another profession - if you can't get over >>> this little bit, you are not suited to be a programmer. This will just >>> be the first of many frustrations for you. >>> >>> And one more thing - you can continue to bitch in this email list, but >>> if you do, it won't be long before people will stop responding to you - >>> for ANY post, even when you're asking for help. >> >> I open this thread as a programmer, you can ignore my questions about >> programming in the future, but you should not ignore my questions as a >> debian user. > > I don't know if your culture is aware of the story of "The Boy Who Cried > Wolf," but you might want to look it up and see what it says. The main > point is that if people get used to seeing your emails following a pattern, > after a while, they're not going to bother to read the same comments and > lines of reasoning over and over if they have never found them interesting > in the past. I think I'm talking about something interesting and serious, I hope there will be someone who is also interested in my thoughts, for those who ignore my questions, I can understand, not everyone will agree with me. > > > > Hal > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.orgwith a subject > of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org > >
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