dadexter wrote:elvish
elvish hmm..I see your elvish and raise you Klingon.
Qapla'
]]>]]>dadexter wrote:elvish
elvish hmm..I see your elvish and raise you Klingon.
elvish
elvish hmm..I see your elvish and raise you Klingon.
]]>Tricky to learn. Irregular gramar. Strange influences. Very strange in general.
Easily abused...
why?
why?
why?
ok, now find me ummmm a ruby interp written in python, then a vim script interp written in ruby and we'll chain them
# jython interp_ruby.py interp_vim.rb helloworld.vim
# time jython interp_ruby.py interp_vim.rb helloworld.vim
time: a jillion
[BTW, if someone can make a python interpreter in java so I can do "java PythonInterp.jar something.py", I would laugh so hard]
Something like this?:
]]>Has anybody noticed that pretty much all the new programming languages are interpreted? AFAIK, Java is the only one that's compiled to bytecode, and hardly anything since C and C++ are compiled to machine code.
I noticed that as well - and it could mean a few things:
a) C/C++ "won", so-to-speak... they came out and people couldn't think of a way to improve on it
b) People miss slow computers, so slather layers and layers of interpreters and virtual machines on top of each other to remind them of their Amigas [BTW, if someone can make a python interpreter in java so I can do "java PythonInterp.jar something.py", I would laugh so hard]
c) Machine level inconsistancies are too annoying to deal with, so virtual machines make that sort of thing easier to deal with
(BTW: what does C# do?)
compiled to IL (Intermediate Language) - think bytecode
the only interesting thing is that all .NET languages compile to IL, so they're binary compatable... which is kinda cool
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