High-level languages, large projects, GNOME and the .NET controversy
Paul Rubin
phr-n2002a at nightsong.com
Thu Feb 7 19:42:51 EST 2002
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Thu Feb 7 19:42:51 EST 2002
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paul at boddie.net (Paul Boddie) writes: > It occurs to me that there are still many people who choose not to use > languages of a higher level than C/C++ for development, and it would > be interesting to know what their reasons are. Of course, writing a > graphical toolkit *purely* in Python is somewhat ambitious, and there > are clearly performance issues to be considered, but I still can't > understand why people would want to write *entire* applications (of > the nature discussed above) in C/C++ these days. > > Can anyone enlighten me? Perhaps I should have cross-posted to > comp.lang.c, or whatever. :-) I worked on one pretty big Java system and although the development process was much easier than C++ (actually I'd say the coding effort was comparable, but the debugging effort was greatly reduced), the resulting Java programs were performance dogs. That was ok for the stuff I was doing--it was a high end application and when the programs ran too slow, we just bought more expensive Sun hardware. If the programs had to run on millions of people's low-cost home PC's, I'm not sure we could have gotten away with using Java.
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