There are a lot of people here complaining about redundancy against other scripting languages, but how many of them are working on anything really unique? They're probably all at some "innovative, gamified social media marketing startup".
Too many people fail to study more than a handful of languages, and they can't understand that how a person's experience in one language can translate to other languages. They spend a lot of time cherry-picking obscure language features and make them out to be make-or-break, everyday-common features of their favorite language, and if you don't know about them, you're doomed doomed doomed. As if the correct selection of StackOverflow postings hasn't already implemented every piece of software known to man in every programming language, already.
I think it will ultimately be good for the world to have more and more new languages come out. For one thing, it will help to blur the lines between languages. Show that languages exist on a continuum by creating that continuum. Show that syntax is trivial, far more important is wise decision making.
"A good workman can make good work with even the worst tools" gets bandied about, especially in response to critiques against PHP. While a good workman may certainly be able to make good work with bad tools, if they are forced to, at gun point, or the behest of their brother-in-law, a good workman would have curated for herself the best tools money could buy. And great workmen have a tendency to make their own tools.
It's also heartening to see so many new languages. It says to me that the quality of the average developer--despite anecdotal evidence--is increasing. It also suggest we live in amazing times that tools have progressed so far to allow anyone with slightly more than a basic CS education to be able to create their own programming languages.
So keep on keeping on, LiteScript. You're okay in my book.
Too many people fail to study more than a handful of languages, and they can't understand that how a person's experience in one language can translate to other languages. They spend a lot of time cherry-picking obscure language features and make them out to be make-or-break, everyday-common features of their favorite language, and if you don't know about them, you're doomed doomed doomed. As if the correct selection of StackOverflow postings hasn't already implemented every piece of software known to man in every programming language, already.
I think it will ultimately be good for the world to have more and more new languages come out. For one thing, it will help to blur the lines between languages. Show that languages exist on a continuum by creating that continuum. Show that syntax is trivial, far more important is wise decision making.
"A good workman can make good work with even the worst tools" gets bandied about, especially in response to critiques against PHP. While a good workman may certainly be able to make good work with bad tools, if they are forced to, at gun point, or the behest of their brother-in-law, a good workman would have curated for herself the best tools money could buy. And great workmen have a tendency to make their own tools.
It's also heartening to see so many new languages. It says to me that the quality of the average developer--despite anecdotal evidence--is increasing. It also suggest we live in amazing times that tools have progressed so far to allow anyone with slightly more than a basic CS education to be able to create their own programming languages.
So keep on keeping on, LiteScript. You're okay in my book.