User:Cg
My Favorite Languages | |
Language | Proficiency |
Smalltalk | Expert |
Scheme | nice and clean |
C | Expert, but only as implementation lang for above |
Assembly | Expert, but only as output of my compilers |
Python | can read |
Forth | implemented a few long time ago; now rusty |
Prolog | rusty |
Pascal | second learned; rusty |
C++ | had to, but hate it |
Java | sucks |
JavaScript | mhmh |
Programming for decades, came along many languages, but Smalltalk is still my favorite, followed by Scheme.
Machines are million+ times faster now, but the way we program is still the same as in the early 90s: edit-compile-run-crash. Well, I guess, most of us have to. Some languages have inherited the better parts of those languages, like late binding, garbage collectin, VMs, reflection, unit tests and metaclasses (which is good and appreciated), but none has the taken the "integrated" in IDE as consequent as Smalltalk.
Not much progress made on the software side, if I think what we did 35+ years ago on those wonderful CADR Machines or the Dorado, running Lisp or Smalltalk on bare metal in a kernel written in those languages, and everything was visible right down to a keyboard interrupt...
Recommended Literature:
SICP; its free online, but I think, good books should also be physically in the bookshelf (support the authors!) and they can be inherited to friends.
I prefer hardcover over paperback or eBook - it lasts longer. search
(ISBN|0-262-51087-1).
(I don't know, if later editions show much of a difference - it probably doesn't matter which you get)
Not to forget: TAOCP (although I think MIX was a big mistake)