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Re: Does a pattern exist
> Citing Ruby's author Matz; "The purpose of Ruby is to maximize programming
> pleasure." <cut> Thanks for information. Now im little more curious how's that pure OO works out in Ruby greetings, Daniel Biesiada |
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Re: Does a pattern exist
"Daniel Biesiada" <spam@no.thank.you> wrote:
> Thanks for information. Now im little more curious how's that pure OO works > out in Ruby As for a second opinion, I found python's approach at OO best for most purposes so far. Nesting by indentation may not be everyones favourite, though. In the end, it's probably only a matter of taste and personal preference. |
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Re: Does a pattern exist
"Daniel Biesiada" <spam@no.thank.you> might (or might not) have
written this on (or about) Wed, 15 Oct 2003 20:40:47 +0200, : >> Sorry I don't know any Java resources on this topic (I use C++Ruby). > >What has Ruby other modern most used languages dont have. >I mean in relation to the opportunity Ruby "can give the industry"? >I ask because few secs of browsing at its site shown me another yet free >scripting language derriving syntax from other langs offering nothing new >to me after those few secs gaze which didnt inspire me to look more >for details. Any good points to go back and take more serious look at? Ruby could be compared to Smalltalk freed from the concept of the image. A file based smalltalk. It's more than that, of course, but you could start there. For people who know only languages like C++, VB, and Java, Ruby is quite an eye-opener. Robert C. Martin | "Uncle Bob" Object Mentor Inc. | unclebob @ objectmentor . com 501 N. Riverside Dr.| Tel: (800) 338-6716 Suite 206 | Fax: (847) 775-8174 | www.objectmentor.com | | www.XProgramming.com Gurnee, IL, | Training and Mentoring | www.junit.org 60031 | OO, XP, Agile, C++, Java, C# | http://fitnesse.org |
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