> > Welcome to CVS. What did Greg Wilson say at IPC8? Paraphrasing: CVS > > is the worst tool everybody uses. :) "CVS is the suckiest tool that developers have to use on a daily basis." (It was actually one of my students at Los Alamos --- and it was one of the few times there's been a round of applause in a class I've taught :-). BTW, if you haven't seen Subversion: http://subversion.tigris.org It's worth checking out (if only to see what's keeping Greg Stein off the streets and out of trouble). The project's aim is to produce a "better CVS", i.e. fix some of the known warts, and web-enable it using WebDAV. I like their goals (fairly conservative, but therefore also fairly likely to be accepted), and their use of ASCII art in PDFs :-). The thing that surprised me was their decision to do their first implementation in C, rather than getting something together quickly in a scripting language, and then re-writing modules for performance when/as necessary. I asked Brian Behlendorf about this; he said the reasons were: > ...we're focusing on C in the short run is to take away any religious > wars concerning python vs java vs perl - C, as crappy as it is, is > still a pretty neutral language when it comes to deployment, as > everyone has a C compiler but not everyone wants to install python. > Also, the server side will mostly consist of an Apache plugin and a > driver for the actual database format, so keeping it all in C and all > in the same process is attractive. > > Also, the developers I've got working on it are very comfortable in C, > and I'm trusting that they considered it and elected to just write in > C directly. These were pretty much the same reasons Larry McVoy gave me when I asked him why BitKeeper was using C rather than a scripting language. I'd be interested in knowing whether this attitude is still the norm, or whether there is evidence of a general shift toward the prototyping/filling-in model. I have a progress report to write for Software Carpentry, and... (In the interests of conserving bandwidth, please reply directly; I'll summarize and re-post if there's sufficient interest.) Thanks, Greg
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