On Sat, 22 Sep 2007 02:32:30 -0700, Paul Rubin wrote: > Carl Banks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> That's it, lost me already. You ever see the kinds of programs >> mechanical engineers write? It isn't software. > > They do a lot of number crunching. Certainly they can appreciate higher > order functions like integrate(f, x0, x1) to integrate the function f > from x0 to x1; or diff(f, x0) to find the derivative of f at x0; etc. > Fortran had cheesy ways to do this as far back as the 1950's.
Well, I appreaciate it, as do many other engineers, but for a lot of engineers functional programming might as well not exist, either because they don't about it or don't care about it. And it doesn't really affect them much, other than making them slightly less efficient then they could have been. That's the key here. Carl Banks -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list