Today's profitable grade programming languages C++ and Java, in scrupulous are means too compound and not sufficiently suited for today's computing environments, Google illustrious engineer Rob Pike dispute in a converse at O'Reilly Open Source Conference. Pike made his case beside such "industrial programming languages" in his important at conference in Portland, Oregon.
"I believe these languages are too hard to utilize, too slight, too complicated. They're far too wordy and their delicacy, complexity and wordiness seem to be rising eventually," Pike said. "They're oversold, and used far too generally." Pike detailed inadequacy of such languages as a way of describing goals that he and other Google engineers have for a new programming language they developed, called Go.
As a design of difficulty of such languages, Pike showed some instances of C++ code. One instance was of a changeable statement that prolonged almost across a whole line of screen.
"How do we contain material similar to this standard way of computing that is trained in schools and is used in industry?" he asked, rhetorically. This sort of programming "is extremely technical. Each step should be defensible to compiler," he said.



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