November 21, 2021

On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 00:41:56 UTC, arco wrote:

>

On Friday, 19 November 2021 at 22:49:50 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:

>

[...]

I don't think it's that good as a motto. A good motto should serve two purposes:

[...]

Sorry I meant Rust, not Rudy (damn Android...)

November 21, 2021

On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 00:43:53 UTC, arco wrote:

>

On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 00:41:56 UTC, arco wrote:

>

On Friday, 19 November 2021 at 22:49:50 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:

>

[...]

I don't think it's that good as a motto. A good motto should serve two purposes:

[...]

Sorry I meant Rust, not Rudy (damn Android...)

I thought you were writing Ruby and was like "realiable? Efficient? Ruby? Dafaq?!" XD

November 21, 2021
On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 00:41:56 UTC, arco wrote:
> On Friday, 19 November 2021 at 22:49:50 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
>> On Wednesday, 17 November 2021 at 16:46:23 UTC, Ben Jones wrote:
>>> I put this in another thread, but "from prototype to(through?) production"
>>
>> I still think this is the best one.
>>
>> "From prototype to production"
>
> I don't think it's that good as a motto. A good motto should serve two purposes:
>
> 1. Tell, in less than a single sentence, why the language is good and why should people try it. "From prototype to production" is too general and too abstract; at first glance people won't understand what it means and when they do, they will ask "... And why should I want to use the same language for prototype and for production?"
>
> 2. It should serve as an overarching statement of what is the language's goal. It should be possible to look at proposed features or improvements and ask yourself, how does this proposal help to achieve the motto's goals?
>
> Rudy's "Empowering everyone to write reliable and efficient software" is too long, not catchy enough, but it is descriptive and it gives a general direction.

I kinda already done this ;-)

'Create interesting software more easily'.

Isn't that what ALL programmers are trying to do?

Isn't that what ALL language developers are trying to do?

Isn't that what would motivate others to use it?

Is there anything more 'overarching' than that?

Take it .. before someone else does ;-)

November 21, 2021
On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 03:09:12 UTC, forkit wrote:
> On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 00:41:56 UTC, arco wrote:
>> [...]
>
> I kinda already done this ;-)
>
> 'Create interesting software more easily'.
>
> Isn't that what ALL programmers are trying to do?
>
> Isn't that what ALL language developers are trying to do?
>
> Isn't that what would motivate others to use it?
>
> Is there anything more 'overarching' than that?
>
> Take it .. before someone else does ;-)

That's a little bit too overarching ;)

ALL languages strive for that, so it doesn't set D apart. It also doesn't provide a rule of thumb as to what the language should and shouldn't do.
November 21, 2021

On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 02:03:07 UTC, Tejas wrote:

>

On Sunday, 21 November 2021 at 00:43:53 UTC, arco wrote:

>

Sorry I meant Rust, not Rudy (damn Android...)

I thought you were writing Ruby and was like "realiable? Efficient? Ruby? Dafaq?!" XD

This sounds like Crystal. That's another young programing language trying to find its niche and competing with Dlang. But looks like they abandoned their "Fast as C, Slick as Ruby" motto recently.

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