j.m.kamrad.ii wrote: > > >What there is instead is an equal and opposite mandate known as > >anti-mandatism that will flock to C/C++ because these languages are more > >"fun". > > Please explain to me why C/C++ is considered "fun" to use. I know what is > fun in software development -- going through software integration and test > with no major problems. I have had significantly more "fun" with Ada than > other languages. And other empirical evidence also bears this out. So > what "fun" am I missing in these languages??? First of all, so have I. My tongue was sort of in my cheek. But more to the point, the "fun" I am describing is the "fun" of unchecked creativity, of reduced keystrokes (readability be damned, we're having fun aren't we), ... in short the "fun" of being a "real" programmer - as in "Real Programmers only use FORTRAN (Assembly, Machine Code, fill in the blank)." -- James Squire mailto:m193884 no junk mail [log in to unmask] MDA Avionics Tools & Processes McDonnell Douglas Aerospace http://www.mdc.com/ Opinions expressed here are my own and NOT my company's "Would you prefer to be conscious or unconscious during the mating? I would prefer conscious, but I don't know what your...pleasure threshold is." -- G'Kar (to Lyta Alexander), "The Gathering"