On dzone, there were a couple of language related articles. Well, ok, the whole site is devoted to programming languages. Perhaps what I was trying to say is that I detected a mild language war brewing. Well, maybe skirmish. Maybe mild skirmish.
Linux.com has an article on D, called New D language pumps up programmer productivity. The writer does a lot of
comparing against C++. I still fail to see why D shines though. What makes it special?
C# is supposed to be a better C++. When you couple C# with Microsoft's CLI (Common Language
Interface) libraries, it is a nice development environment. C# takes away some nice things from
C++, but adds its own nice things.
Java is also supposed to be a better C++. Java does indeed do a good job of of being platform
independent. For instance, I liked the way of being able to install Eclipse, the Java based IDE,
on a Linux platform or a Windows platform and being up and running in minutes. I havn't
programmed in Java, so can't make a fair comparison of what makes Java a nice place in which to
program.
In an article by
Rick Hightower, he mentions Java, Ruby, Python, and Scala. In the article is a graph showing
language usage. Java ranks first and C++ second.
I have an insurance modelling friend who swears by Python, which ranks a low sixth in the
chart.
Anyway, what got me started on this all was an article called
The
Great Language Backlash. I thought, oh cool, someone is going to do an impressive rant on
what is missing in all the world's programming languages. it ended up being some little rant
about Ruby and Groovy, with Ruby being last in the chart I mentioned above. I'm glad the writer
redeemed himself with his final phrase of the article: use the best tool for the job. Well, I
suppose that phrase, in and of itself, is worthy of many a rant all by its lonesome.
I just can't resist: C++ rocks!! Maybe the version 0x should be changed to C!!! I'll leave
it up to the reader to determine how many '!' belong to the C and how many belong to sentence
punctuation.