
Hello Ralf, Wednesday, August 2, 2006, 1:27:39 PM, you wrote:
Read a sentence like this "If your programming language requires you to use functors, you're not getting all the benefits of a modern programming environment. See if you can get some of your money back."
in the article "history of Haskell" (announced by SPJ here) it was one brilliant phrase, what is 100% true for me - "Haskell jobs attracts most matured programmers". apart from Haskell, i almost don't know any language which is adequate to mindlevel of experienced programmer and allow me to think about functionality, about algorithms as opposite to implementation details and low-level code. and in particular, i hate repeating the same code more than one time and therefore i don't rate highly languages that don't allow me to use (and define) functors (it is not fair, but afair Joel is the man which worked in MS as programmer and as programmer's manager? i once reading his article which was started with statement "our (startup) firm requires the best programmer's talents" and in the middle he was written several examples of code which "best programmers" should be able to write, including such "complex" tasks as reversing linked list :) ) -- Best regards, Bulat mailto:Bulat.Ziganshin@gmail.com