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  3. C is a better language than any language you care to name.

C is a better language than any language you care to name.

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  • D DaveAuld

    Chris Maunder wrote:

    C is a better language than any language you care to name

    No, I think I would much rather talk to someone using English. :rolleyes:

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    Simon ORiordan from UK
    wrote on last edited by
    #76

    printf("Why is that then?");

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    • C Chris Maunder

      Discuss. I've just read The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C[^] and decided to outsource my ranting response to it

      cheers Chris Maunder

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      Michael Kingsford Gray
      wrote on last edited by
      #77

      OK, I'll "bite". "C" is quite the most disastrous so-called "language"[1] ever to become popular. Why? It's total lack of marshalling over record boundaries in memory have cost the globe at least several 100 trillion dollars in viruses, damages, fornicate-ups, interminable repairs/patches, Trojans, injuries, deaths, et cetera. That alone is enough to relegate this incurable abortion of a syntactical nightmare to the bit-bucket, if not Spandau prison. Have at it, you "C" devils. ___________________________ [1] Designed for punch-card use, brevity & conservation of card-space were essential. It thereby became an impenetrably terse & line-break free mess. All calculated to save IBM punched cards. And the syntax is dangerously ambiguous, all over the shop. Don't get me started on the monumentally bone-headed notion that CASE statements should cascade through without a BREAK clause! I mean. What total idiot "thought" that this would be a great idea?

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      • C Chris Maunder

        Discuss. I've just read The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C[^] and decided to outsource my ranting response to it

        cheers Chris Maunder

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #78

        Always was and always will be. IMHO. :-O

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        • J Joe Woodbury

          Garbage collection is a flaw, not a feature. It not only sucks resources, it creates a huge unknown. Some of the most difficult problems I've dealt with were with garbage collection (in one recent case, we never did solve the problem--some the most brilliant engineers I know also failed to solve it. Around the same time, we tracked things back to a lesser known bug in the .NET 4.0 garbage collector.)

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          BobJanova
          wrote on last edited by
          #79

          Well no, it's a feature. GCd environments eliminate a large group of common bugs, free the developer to think about higher level stuff and not litter their code with memory management cruft, and are in general a Good Thing. It's just that it's a feature that, in certain particular circumstances (particularly when resource usage is tight), isn't helpful.

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          • C Chris Maunder

            Discuss. I've just read The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C[^] and decided to outsource my ranting response to it

            cheers Chris Maunder

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            bantling
            wrote on last edited by
            #80

            I don't care so much about the language as everything else. When Java first came out, I finally had a system to write graphical desktop applications on different systems without a ton of BS. Sure people joked about AWT being "write once, debug everywhere", but compared to everything else it was light years ahead. I had libraries that actually worked - on average, I could not compile a C library, so who knows if it did what I wanted or not. I had really simple database access, network access, all the stuff I had wanted and couldn't seem to get. I was like a kid in a candy store. This is the problem with C - not the language, but the lack of something akin to the JSR process, where standard libraries for all sorts of useful things are created. I'd be the first guy to say that Java programmers love to go overboard and make a Rube Goldberg library for everything with 59 layers of abstraction, whereas C programmers tend towards minimal libraries that do just what's needed and no more. But then those C programmers love macros and other things that make the code hard to understand, and they need systems like autoconf and ports trees to actually get their libraries to even compile on different platforms. Six of one, half dozen of the other. So I still love Java for all it provides. The language is overly complicated, and generics are by far the singular worst - and completely unnecessary - feature. When I saw all these new script languages cropping up, I thought, well what about the library for database access, for generating spreadsheets, PDFs, reports, images, etc? I failed to see why I'd want to switch to something shiny and new that is clearly less capable just because the language was simpler. Years later, I see people moving back to Java because they had scalability problems, or problems like this author described with something fundamentally wrong buried deep in the guts of the system. And I still don't see much in the way of database libraries and other things. I have a chuckle when I read about such things. The more things change, the more they stay the same. I'm sure there are other languages that have a great set of libraries for useful stuff, I'm sure .Net can likely do a lot of the things I need. But would I be any better off with another language? I don't think so. And I can use other languages through the ScriptManager anyway, while retaining access to all the libraries Java offers.

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            • R Roger Wright

              Rutvik Dave wrote:

              C is not a language, it's an alphabet.

              Actually, it is just one element in a set called an "alphabet." We also have a 'D' and 24 other members in the set.

              Will Rogers never met me.

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              Rutvik Dave
              wrote on last edited by
              #81

              ... and the English language has killed my joke, again! :-D

              Remind Me This - Manage, Collaborate and Execute your Project in the Cloud

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              • L Lost User

                Are you a VB Code reviewer? :p

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                ZurdoDev
                wrote on last edited by
                #82

                :) :thumbsup: VB Code is actually very easy to understand but you're right, the code written by some people in VB is atrocious.

                There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

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                • J Jeremy Falcon

                  Roger Wright wrote:

                  Then came C, and the death spiral of useful language development began.

                  It's like just as soon as computers get faster, we want to make the languages more bloated. That way we never enjoy the new speed, we simply keep things the same and have a new cool shiny layer that sounds technical to toss on top of it. I've never made a programming language, but when I think of something like Ruby, which has some nice features, and then I think it's slow as dirt so I'll never use it. Just because CPUs are faster doesn't mean we can waste cycles, otherwise it's always a game of catch up.

                  Jeremy Falcon

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                  grralph1
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #83

                  :thumbsup: Agree with you totally.

                  "Rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing people who can't talk for people who can't read." Frank Zappa 1980

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                  • F Forogar

                    ...and c# is pointedly better! Hmmm... that doesn't work, sharp ---> points... but there isn't much use of pointers directly so that may be a bad analogy and therefore an even worse pun! However, with puns, the worst is the best so, yeah! :-)

                    - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

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                    Fabio Franco
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #84

                    C# is better because # is composed of four pluses, therefore 4 times better than C: ++ ++

                    To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson ---- Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia

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                    • C Chris Maunder

                      Discuss. I've just read The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C[^] and decided to outsource my ranting response to it

                      cheers Chris Maunder

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                      Reese Currie
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #85

                      I think my favorite quotation about C is, "C is memory with syntactic sugar." AFAIK it is original to Dennis Kubes and first appears here: http://denniskubes.com/2013/04/23/how-to-think-about-variables-in-c/[^] The nice thing about C is you can almost always do whatever it is you want to do in C. The downside is, you can almost always do whatever it is you want to do an order of magnitude more easily in something else, even if that "something else" is C++. Nevertheless, that "something else" is almost universally just an interface, in some form or fashion, to C or C++ code.

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                      • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

                        I agree that compilers do produce good code: but they can't interpret what the author is trying to get the hardware to do and that means what they generate can be spectacularly inefficient. I had this problem with the ARM development kit (which was stupid money) - I needed to generate a specific wave output with my data to match the hardware it was interfacing to - and the C / Embedded C++ code just wouldn't do it no matter what I tried. In assembler it was trivial (but I eventually fitted a second PIC processor just to handle the interface - and coded that in C :laugh: )

                        Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

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                        Fabio Franco
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #86

                        OriginalGriff wrote:

                        but they can't interpret what the author is trying to get the hardware to do and that means what they generate can be spectacularly inefficient.

                        I agree, I love programming in Assembly, but I'm not sure I would beat the compiler, I'm just an enthusiast, don't program in it professionally. I also love C/C++ and was wondering if the ARM compiler you used support mixing up C and Assembly, like:

                        __asm
                        {
                        INC [EAX]
                        MOV EBX, [EAX]
                        ...
                        }

                        To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson ---- Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia

                        OriginalGriffO 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • Z ZurdoDev

                          :) :thumbsup: VB Code is actually very easy to understand but you're right, the code written by some people in VB is atrocious.

                          There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

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                          _WinBase_
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #87

                          you can write bad code in any language, and as a programmer of 35 years ive seen more of it than u can shake a stick at, and as far as the VB v c# argument goes, it all compiles to the same IL anyway, the skill is in the programmers interpretation and solution, not for c# snobs to blindly say that its somehow 'better' - its a subjective argument

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                          • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

                            It's a good language, but in the modern world it's a bit...outclassed. If you want small tight code for embedded work, then assembler is probably a good bet - though C is very useful there, it does tend to generate bloated code compared to that produced by a good assembler programmer. The C code will be produced faster, but it'll need more RAM, more processor, more...in embedded work you don't always have the luxury! If you want desktop work, then C# or C++ have so many massive advantages in terms of OOPs design that there really isn't any comparison. It'll take you a lot longer to write the same app in C, and it'll almost certainly be harder to maintain. If you want to write a website, then good luck doing it in C... It's a product of it's time: it was designed to be "better than COBOL and FORTRAN". But the world has moved on, and the "competition" is a lot more sophisticated now.

                            Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

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                            MikeTheFid
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #88

                            OriginalGriff wrote:

                            If you want small tight code for embedded work, then assembler is probably a good bet - though C is very useful there, it does tend to generate bloated code compared to that produced by a good assembler programmer.

                            Agree if you're code is WOUF (Write Once, Use Forever). The choice depends on what the engineering constraints are. If I want to accommodate the hardware people having an upgrade path, going from an 8051 to an 80186 say (to use an archaic example), then portability and reusability are the constraints and C makes much more sense. I really don't want to do the SSDD shuffle for the rest of my egregiously unnatural life. :) ("bloated code" used in reference to "C", Gracie? Oh! I get it. It's a pesky relativity thing.)

                            Cheers, Mike Fidler "I intend to live forever - so far, so good." Steven Wright "I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met." Also Steven Wright

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                            • F Fabio Franco

                              C# is better because # is composed of four pluses, therefore 4 times better than C: ++ ++

                              To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson ---- Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia

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                              poc42
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #89

                              No, sorry not 4x+s or sharp but hash... C was so good MS had to make a ... of it ;-)

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                              • _ _WinBase_

                                you can write bad code in any language, and as a programmer of 35 years ive seen more of it than u can shake a stick at, and as far as the VB v c# argument goes, it all compiles to the same IL anyway, the skill is in the programmers interpretation and solution, not for c# snobs to blindly say that its somehow 'better' - its a subjective argument

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                                ZurdoDev
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #90

                                _WinBase_ wrote:

                                he skill is in the programmers interpretation and solution, not for c# snobs to blindly say that its somehow 'better' - its a subjective argument

                                +5. I agree. :thumbsup:

                                There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

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                                • C Chris Maunder

                                  Discuss. I've just read The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C[^] and decided to outsource my ranting response to it

                                  cheers Chris Maunder

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                                  MikeTheFid
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #91

                                  C is a weakly hyped language.

                                  Cheers, Mike Fidler "I intend to live forever - so far, so good." Steven Wright "I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met." Also Steven Wright

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                                  • F Fabio Franco

                                    OriginalGriff wrote:

                                    but they can't interpret what the author is trying to get the hardware to do and that means what they generate can be spectacularly inefficient.

                                    I agree, I love programming in Assembly, but I'm not sure I would beat the compiler, I'm just an enthusiast, don't program in it professionally. I also love C/C++ and was wondering if the ARM compiler you used support mixing up C and Assembly, like:

                                    __asm
                                    {
                                    INC [EAX]
                                    MOV EBX, [EAX]
                                    ...
                                    }

                                    To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson ---- Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia

                                    OriginalGriffO Offline
                                    OriginalGriffO Offline
                                    OriginalGriff
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #92

                                    Yes: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.dui0205j/Cihccdja.html[^]

                                    Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

                                    "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
                                    "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt

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                                    • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

                                      Yes: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.dui0205j/Cihccdja.html[^]

                                      Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

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                                      Fabio Franco
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #93

                                      Awesome, thanks

                                      To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson ---- Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • C Chris Maunder

                                        Discuss. I've just read The Unreasonable Effectiveness of C[^] and decided to outsource my ranting response to it

                                        cheers Chris Maunder

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                                        B Offline
                                        Breamore Boy
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #94

                                        https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2002-November/141486.html

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                                        • J Jeremy Falcon

                                          Roger Wright wrote:

                                          Then came C, and the death spiral of useful language development began.

                                          It's like just as soon as computers get faster, we want to make the languages more bloated. That way we never enjoy the new speed, we simply keep things the same and have a new cool shiny layer that sounds technical to toss on top of it. I've never made a programming language, but when I think of something like Ruby, which has some nice features, and then I think it's slow as dirt so I'll never use it. Just because CPUs are faster doesn't mean we can waste cycles, otherwise it's always a game of catch up.

                                          Jeremy Falcon

                                          J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          James Curran
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #95

                                          Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                                          Just because CPUs are faster doesn't mean we can waste cycles, otherwise it's always a game of catch up.

                                          True, only if you're doing something extremely CPU-bound. However, the vast majority of current application are highly user-interactive, where , by far, the really speed bottleneck is the user.

                                          Truth, James

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