Think, most times when i sit in front of my computer i found that people is using a new language, "that language is nice for it, because A, B and C, etc.", we have some stable ones like C, C++ in the general aspect and others less used by the people like lisp, smalltalk, etc.
Today we have, let's say take a look into this website and, its just wat is known from the author and their "visitors".
Sure i wont make programs with Fortran, but that doesn't matter, today our effort to unify things didn't get well, we like to try out everything we thing that might be nice, even for a little fun.
The core are the concepts, anyway, OO aspects, procedural, Aspect Oriented Design?(i stay just with OO, tanks).
Most of the times we have a good tool on our hands, but most of these times we aren't ready for this, to deal with, the learning curve can be fast, but there is a lot of directions somebody can take, and, i just say Thanks even if i dont use it some time when i said i wanted to.
Today what i see in the open source development is that, even with a lot of "open source languages" in most of the times a lot of softwares is sharing implementations that make dependencies with perl and python.Most of the times perl comes with its XML parser and python with the interface for some GUI apps.
The support is really big, most of the C/C++ libraries that are frequently used by open source programs have a binding for be used with python, sure the perl has a lot of libraries, but it's not
necessarly a software with quailty, or even usefull. At the first glance we look the syntax, but it's not the features we programmers should look for, are those that improve what is more relevant at moment(maintenance, before, now and maybe after ).
Some one said ... a famous one ;)
"...
Perl still has its uses. For tiny projects (100 lines or fewer) that involve a lot of text pattern matching, I am still more likely to tinker up a Perl-regexp-based solution than to reach for Python. For good recent examples of such things, see the timeseries and growthplot scripts in the fetchmail distribution. Actually, these are much like the things Perl did in its original role as a sort of combination awk/sed/grep/sh, before it had functions and direct access to the operating system API. For anything larger or more complex, I have come to prefer the subtle virtues of Python—and I think you will, too." Eric S. Raymond
Planning is not with me, really.
But, like i said, i might give a try. ;)
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