@Jefffrey no, and it can't make coffee either; but guess what? You can do stuff with it. Yes, despite the fact that it has null (see earlier comment about that)
Imagine the buzz kill if you celebrated christmas based on reality. "Here you go little Jimmie! A gift from Xian Jin in china and Pin Kyun in taiwan!" - "An iPad! Yaay!" -"Say thank you to them for getting occupational cancer so that you could have this!"
@Jefffrey no, I'm not amused by your attempt(s) to prove that nulls are a mistake, simply because your "proof"'s that you don't know how it works / some other unimportant language "fixes" this (where it's not broken on the first place)
If it really is a problem to you then you may as well stare at something that pleases you more and code with it. This entire conversation should be taken somewhere else because it doesn't discuss anything. I'm going to trash any more bits of it incoming, even though no one recommended to.
@VinceEmigh I discussed this above (scroll up, and hit "more messages" where necessary), null exists AND WORKS because we don't need no dummy objects and unnecessary Optionals.
@Jefffrey the fact that you have so much time on your hands to come and discuss such an irrelevant point makes me think that you don't do that much stuff in Haskell -- why don't you code instead of bothering (discussing such a futile point with) us?
@Jefffrey if you want to discuss language theory --> cstheory.stackexchange.com
Yeah i know about optional, but doesnt that return a dummy object? You have to specify an instance using ofElse, yeah? (never actually used Optional myseld)
@VinceEmigh If you use has() on Optional, it tells you whether it actually has an object (and therefore null counts as one), and get() returns null for both null and doesn't have anything