Re-reading my message, I think I've turned into an Old Lisper. ;) Robby
On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 8:42 AM, Robby Findler <ro...@eecs.northwestern.edu> wrote: > This whole "too many parens" thing has nothing to do with the language > and everything to do with the programmer. > > I googled "javascript example callback code", took the second hit (the > first hit seemed to go to a page with VB code; go figure) and the > first snipped of javascript code. Guess what it ends with. Did you > guess this: > > console.log(data); > }); > }); > }); > > ? Right on! > > (Amusingly, the rest of the blog post seems to be about avoiding the > nesting by giving things names :). > > Robby > > On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 8:25 AM, Matthias Felleisen > <matth...@ccs.neu.edu> wrote: >> >> On Jul 21, 2011, at 6:44 AM, Stephen Bloch wrote: >> >>> Right. Nested conditionals and loops in Racket are no more syntactically >>> painful than nested conditionals and loops in Java/C/C++, if you put braces >>> around the bodies. >>> ( if ( > x y ) (+ x 3 ) ( * 4 y ) ) >>> if ( x > y ) { x = 3 ; } else { y = 4 ; } >> >> >> You don't have to go non-idiomatic in Racket to approximate >> the non-nesting, step-by-step style of C, Java, and such languages. >> >> Now that define is legal in many places, just give names to >> intermediate results. More generally, here is a conjecture >> about the psychology of programming: >> >> people take to programming in C more easily than >> to algebra because they can 'store' intermediate >> results in 'registers' and take a break to contemplate >> what to do next. >> >> Warning: this is an untested conjecture by a guy who has 0 >> background in psychology or how to conduct an experiment. >> All of this is based on observations. >> >> -- Matthias >> >> >> >> _________________________________________________ >> For list-related administrative tasks: >> http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users >> > _________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users