Lennart Augustsson wrote:
But I don't want Perl, I want a well designed language and well
designed libraries.
I think it's find to let libraries proliferate, but at some point you
also need to step back and abstract.
I agree.
On Fri, Nov 28, 2008 at 9:46 PM, Don Stewart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
andrewcoppin:
What *I* propose is that somebody [you see what I did there?] should sit
down, take stock of all the multitudes of array libraries, what features
they have, what obvious features they're missing, and think up a good
API from scratch. Once we figure out what the best way to arrange all
this stuff is, *then* we attack the problem of implementing it for real.
It seems lots of people have written really useful code, but we need to
take a step back and look at the big picture here before writing any
more of it.
No.
My view would be to let the free market of developers decide what is
best. No bottlenecks -- there's too many Haskell libraries already (~1000 now).
And this approach has yielded more code than ever before, more libraries
than ever before, and library authors are competing.
So let the market decide. We're a bazaar, not a cathedral.
I find this kind of attitude disturbing.
Are you seriously asserting that it's "bad" for people to stop and think
about their designs before building? That it's "bad" for people to get
together and coordinate their efforts? Would you really prefer each and
every developer to reinvent the wheel until we have 50,000 equivilent
but slightly different wheel implementations? Certainly you seem
obsessed with the notion that "more packages on Hackage == better". Well
in my book, quantity /= quality. (The latter being vastly more important
than the former - while admittedly far harder to measure objectively.) I
would far prefer to see one well-written library that solves the problem
properly than see 25 incompatible libraries that all solve small
fragments of the problem poorly. In the latter case, there will be no
"competition" between libraries; everybody will just give up and not use
*any* of them. You _can_ have too much choice!
I really hope I'm not the only person here who sees it this way...
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