By puredanger
via factor-language.blogspot.com
Published: Jan 12 2009 / 13:40
By puredanger
via factor-language.blogspot.com
Published: Jan 12 2009 / 13:40
Comments
alarmnummer replied ago:
The Java language is quite dead.
The platform however is still very much alive. And if you compare the Java community with the .NET community, you will see that much more is going on.
But it is a shame that not many new interesting features are added (especially closures).
willcode4beer replied ago:
All of the complaints are about the API not the language.
On another note, do we really need many changes to the language? I'd rather see more effort on optimizing the JIT and JVM and improvements in the core API. If I need closures, or whatever, I can just use one of the other languages (that runs on the VM) that has them.
noahz replied ago:
this.
ashore replied ago:
The language is fine and the platform is fine. Find me another langauge that is as fast, can be written and runs anywhere, has such an extensive set of open source libraries, and then I'll consider changing. Until then, articles and comments like alarmnummer's are the mental masturbation of supreme asshats.
cbang replied ago:
ashore replied ago:
Oh yes, so sad. As a developer I definitely prefer an unstable language that lacks standards, to a stable, fast, mature one with a wealth of tools, any library you can imagine, and a massive developer community.
henk replied ago:
@cbang
Our team uses Java and everyone is very productive and happy. What's your point again?
Ignacio Coloma replied ago:
I still think the author has a valid point. To me, a release without closures does not make any sense.
Everybody writes loops, every day. Since the advent of spring, really few people open files by hand. I think the JDK team needs some focus.
sproketboy replied ago:
No he doesn't. It's self serving clap trap. Closures are not that important.
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