@sehe I'd put Rust as definitely the shakier one: until recently not even syntax was frozen; the web is full of written material that has become obsolete after changes in the language; and it's comparably very hard to learn, primarily for lack of source material.
@R.MartinhoFernandes robor, dear, will you do one thing for the lounge: to keep xeo's weight on the record & speedily report it here when he gains substantial amount of weight?
--- glfw/include/os/darwin/glfw_config.h Wed Jan 28 11:44:06 2015
+++ /C/PROJECTS/glfw-3.0.4-diff/include/os/darwin/glfw_config.h Thu Jan 1 01:00:00 1970
@@ -1,84 +0,0 @@
-//
-// 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source
-// distribution.
@Rapptz what is? I open an interesting link, written in an english tweet, about a guy named "Faith and Brave" (totes not english), and there's FUCKING JAPANESE INSIDE
@BartekBanachewicz That may be true but hardly everyone with the right skillset would work for a ginormous company that has this kind of cash. They might just run away or start their own
The guy's blog is in Japanese. Someone else (read: not the author) posted it on Twitter. And you are complaining that the guy's blog (read: not the person who tweeted it) is in Japanese and not English.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes. It must be frustrating that you know you're sitting on a valid argument, yet seem utterly incapable of just making that argument. So, now reductio-ad-absurdum will have to do :)
"waffle" has no inherent meaning either. It's just a sequence of letters as opaque as any other. There's nothing in the composition of letters that tells me that they're delicious
@BartekBanachewicz Yes. It must be frustrating that you know you're sitting on a valid argument, yet seem utterly incapable of just making that argument. So, now reductio-ad-absurdum will have to do :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes but the PL keywords and functions aren't conjured out of thin air! we base them on the natural language already used by people, to make concepts like "if" automatically mappable to what we already know and use IRL
if you cut the connection out, you surely can learn the PL, but that's much harder. Every one of the blobs you see is new to you. Not only you need to learn new semantics, you need to learn new way of describing them in words.
@BartekBanachewicz Sure, but the concept of if exists in other languages than English too. As a Dane, I could learn to mentally map the C++ keyword if to the Danish word "hvis" if I didn't speak English. It wouldn't really hinder me
Philosophy of language is concerned with four central problems: the nature of meaning, language use, language cognition, and the relationship between language and reality. For continental philosophers, however, the philosophy of language tends to be dealt with, not as a separate topic, but as a part of logic (see the section "Language and continental philosophy" below).
First and foremost, philosophers of language prioritize their inquiry on the nature of meaning. They seek to explain what it means to "mean" something. Topics in that vein include the nature of synonymy, the origins of meaning itself...
Yes, they're mnemonics from some weird assembly language on some obscure and long dead architecteure. Fuck if I can remember what they stand for, but they're very common operators that every lisper learns to understand, recognize and use very quickly
@jalf Oh, right, now I see how it totally doesn't matter whether we call the function taking the head of the list "head" or "cdr", the same with the tail of the list - both "tail" and "car" can do.
@thecoshman would you recognize the function identifier が elsewhere in the source, and mentally go "oh, I remember that was called up there"? I suspect not. :)
In Careers, I was asked to add more "Lesebeiträge" (which is German for reading contributions), but the Link leads me to https://careers.stackoverflow.com/cv/edit/...#writing, which is about writing contributions.
I suggest to correct the text on the link to "Schreibbeiträge" (writing contributi...
@BartekBanachewicz sure, it's nice and convenient when the keyword coincides with a word in another language you understand. No one's disputing that. It is also how I sometimes understand a few words of German. The point is, it is possible to learn other languages (programming languages as well as human ones) even when this is not the case
I can learn french words that have no similarity to their Danish counterparts, just like I can learn the Lisp keyword cdr despite it just looking like random letters
If you don't learn new words exclusively through their etymology, you are effectively just accepting them as opaque blobs that have some meaning assigned to them.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What I'm arguing is that learning English before learning programming makes a lot sense. And if you write your blog posts in English, other people from your country that might want to learn programming will be forced to learn english before that, so you're making them the best gift ever.
@jalf I'm not witholding anything. I'm just not translating posts related to programming for the sake of people not willing to learn the language that makes talking about programming easier.
Talking about programming in Polish is ultimately shitty. I can't do it.
Because I strongly suspect I'd just go "ah, squiggle, squiggle, squiggle" without really recognizing individual ones well enough to match all occurrences of it