From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: newbie: non local exits in CL Date: 1997/07/11 Message-ID: <3077622962637059@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 256200587 References: <5ptmur$ne@news.u-bordeaux.fr> <5ptscu$am0@tools.bbnplanet.com> <5q24b2$p04@news.u-bordeaux.fr> mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 8800 8879; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp * Laurent Peron | Probably it does, but I am a bit perplexed by this new huge language I | have just started learning. It is not easy to make "the good usage" of a | given form, macro, function, etc. hm. this was how I felt when I had to use C++, but not when I was learning Common Lisp. I sympathize strongly with the feeling that everything you do could have been done better, but I think there is a difference between CL and C++: I was actually afraid that what I did would break something because I didn't do it the Right Way. in C++, that's exactly what happens, and many programmers spend a large amount of time frustrated because of it. in CL, it only wastes resources, or you get thrown into the debugger, which should be pretty reasonable choices. (curiously, this fear of breaking things seems to be the main threshold many people have towards computers in the first place. I was sort of ashamed to realize that I experienced when I had to deal with C++. but now I know it's because the computers people fear and the languages programmers fear are just plain badly designed!) perhaps indicative of the sorry state of the world, I have talked to C++ programmers who exhibit a fear of other languages for exactly this reason: they think that every new language must be as hard to learn to do right as the randomness of C++. I haven't seen this fear in other languages, not even C. I have also seen a lot of C++ code that exhibit this fear, in that the programmers sort of double check that things went well, especially after the code has gained some age. #\Erik -- if DUI is "Driving Under the Influence" then GUI must be "Graphics Under the Influence"