Really, I'm looking for a small, passive trasmitter that I can embed in something and program / write specific data into. I then obviously need a specialized reader device.
If Haskell wants to preserve all type information then I assume it has no things like virtual function or function pointers. Does this mean slow compile times?
@CatPlusPlus Maybe I am repeating myself, but I like the idea of not having to make N types derive from the same interface in order to work generically with them. That's the kind of stuff pure OOP languages lead you to.
@CatPlusPlus OK, for example: we all know Square cannot derive from Rectangle if Rectangle contains operations such as Stretch(). That's I assume what you mean when you say "people's use of inheritance is flawed"
@AndyProwl it's more that people tend to have a 'object' class, which is inherited by a 'shape' class, which is inherited by a 'square' class, which is inherited by a 'rectangle' class
I'm creating a small, secure passive transmitter I can give them on a keychain or bracelet, then installing readers in certain locations, then attaching those to things like doors to get them to auto-open.
@CatPlusPlus While I agree with you, I also believe in real-world situations design patterns like that normally tend to arise, but in a less obvious ways. And then you have to recur to dynamic downcasts and the like.
@CatPlusPlus It's not implicit interfaces that solve the problem. It's separating publicly visible inheritance structure from taking over another types fields and methods
I was thinking of writing a web scaper and how I could need organize the downloaded data. Url paths are similar to file paths and the data in artist/album/song could be stored in directory artist/album/song. However, data is not always organizable like that. For example if the website is a recommendations generator based on a given list of preferences. (This reminds me of the multiple inheritance debate.)
Your classes? Then don't inherit from Collection. Other's classes? Why do you care? You can still take IList and not know whether Collection<T> is used or not.
that many languages don't allow you to cleanly separate "I want to reuse x's implementation" and "It should be visible to everyone that I inherit from x"
As a general software developer you're always working in the context of some project. So your design will always be influenced by the needs for that particular project.
You can sequentially "compose" things by writing them one after another in the source and manually linking input and output, but there's no elegant composing available.
However, the available tools on the unix shell are kinda arbitrary. If you need a certain job done then you can't decompose systematically down to the shell programs you'll need.
@AndyProwl How would you filter and then map a collection in C++?
user142019
@StackedCrooked Imperative programming is about series of steps that are executed in order, where those steps usually change state (otherwise they're pointless). Functions aren't too relevant.