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- Subject: Re: Python people strive to embrace LuaJIT
- From: Miles Bader <miles@...>
- Date: Sat, 04 Sep 2010 18:34:57 +0900
Stefan Behnel <stefan_ml@behnel.de> writes:
>> [in general -- of course, there are cases where it doesn't matter,
>> such as very short and simple code]
>
> In general, of course, well written code *is* short and simple.
Sure but note that something that artificially lowers the threshold of
readability for single units of code doesn't tend to actually make the
entirety of the code any simpler, merely to cause the structure to be
pushed to higher levels.
In some cases, this can be good, and encourages useful refactoring and
abstraction. In other cases, the additional high-level structure is
just noise, and can actually make the program more confusing.
It depends on the problem.
[and in practice of course, a lowered threshold of readability often
_doesn't_ result in shorter functions or anything, merely less readable
functions of the same length -- fortran in any language, etc, etc...]
-Miles
--
Laughter, n. An interior convulsion, producing a distortion of the features
and accompanied by inarticulate noises. It is infectious and, though
intermittent, incurable.