-
This is the second point which Walz raised in a comment which I thought deserved a separate blog entry. (You can read the original comment and the first point I liked.) Walz's second observation is about efficiency: He goes on to ask where Ruby's case statement lives in this spectrum. I should admit up front that I have my own personal demons concerning the switch statement which I need to work out myself (partially through this blog). Walz is pretty much on target here. The restrictions on C's
(Read Full Article)
Related Articles
- Languages and System for Project Euler
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- PE Problem #1 in Python
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- Analyzing Book Sales
- also mentions Scheme
- Supercompilation for Haskell
- also mentions Haskell
- PE Problem #1 in Erlang
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- PE Problem #1 in Haskell
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- PE Problem #2 in All Languages (Part I)
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- Project Euler
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- PE Problem #2 in All Languages (Part II)
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens
- PE Problem #1
- also written by Jeremy D. Frens





