"David Simmons" <pulsar at qks.com> wrote in message news:Pk8G6.23922$Jh5.23242637 at news1.rdc1.sfba.home.com... > "Andrew Hunt" <andy at toolshed.com> wrote in message > news:slrn9ehfbt.frk.andy at workbench.toolshed.com... > > > Out of the dirth of scripting languages available, > > > Python and PHP are at the top of our well-known candidate list. There > are > > > parties who have either expressed an interest in or are working on > languages > > > such as Scheme, JScript, and Basic. > > > > Have you taken a look at Ruby? > > Yes, I have indeed. I've known about Ruby and monitored it for a couple of > years now. I have the Ruby book and I've watched its attention rise and then > fall relatively quickly. Updating my earlier post now that I've gone and re-examined their site, events, and newsgroup. --- Hmmm... Maybe it just has seasonal lulls. There Tampa conference this fall will be an interesting indicator. I have the distinct impression that a large if not dominant portion of the user base is in Japan. I wonder why their conferenced wasn't held there? > Its newsgroup/discussion lists are pretty dardn > quiet and the website is not particularly active -- maybe I've just not been > monitoring the right areas? I just went a renewed my link to its newsgroup and I see it has quite a lot of activity in recent weeks. My news service is not archiving more than a month or so on this group so I can't see further back. I also notice a number of familiar folks posting in their group... > > > > > It's remarkably clean, dynamic, fully OO, and open source. I find I can > > wrote more code in Ruby faster, and with fewer errors, than any other > > language I know (and I've tried quite a few). > > That's high praise indeed. > > SmallScript is itself a complete and rich language, which I not so humbly > will suggest to you exceeds the facilities and ease of use of Ruby. > > But truth to tell that is not the real issue in selecting the scripting > languages on the above list. The principal criteria are first and foremost > popularity (user-base and depth/breadth of the frameworks/codebase) and > second the clarity and capacity of the language. Perl would have been on the > list but, given a choice, it didn't meet my second criteria. > > > > > For more info, try: > > > > www.ruby-lang.org > > > > and > > > > www.rubycentral.com > > > > > > Enjoy! > > Cheers! > > -- Dave S. > > > > > -- > > Andrew Hunt, The Pragmatic Programmers, LLC. > > Innovative Object-Oriented Software Development > > web: http://www.pragmaticprogrammer.com email: > andy at pragmaticprogrammer.com > > -- > > Books by Andrew Hunt and David Thomas: > > "The Pragmatic Programmer" (Addison-Wesley 2000) > > "Programming Ruby" (Addison-Wesley 2001) > > -- > >
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