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[ale] Ruby vs C, a non-technical chat



Leam, ?you mentioned fun in your criteria. ?I like that. ? ?The most fun I?ve had programming lately has been?in Go. ? pro-tip for googling it is is to use ?golang? ? https://golang.org ? ? I?ve done basic, pascal, modular-2, assembly, C, C++, Perl, Python, Javascript and probably a few others I?ve forgotten. ? ? Go rocks.




I don?t spend a lot of time thinking about it from a career path perspective, but there are some signs it could prove

marketable, maybe. ? ?Docker is built with it for example. ?Digital Ocean seems to use it a lot too.


Here?s a list of companies.. ?https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/GoUsers




Maybe it?s never be more than a niche language ? I can?t predict the future on that one. ?I hear good things about Rust and with Apple?s Swift being open sourced it has a shot a being generally useful too. ? ? Javascript has even gotten more interesting with the rise of the node, express and angular (aka. MEAN stack when you add mongoldb).




Anyway.. I digress. ?I was trying to plug Go. :-)




cheers,




Darrell






















?http://golliher.net

On Thu, Aug 6, 2015 at 7:18 AM, Leam Hall <leamhall at gmail.com> wrote:

> On 08/05/15 23:44, Michael B. Trausch wrote:
>> On Wed, 2015-08-05 at 12:45 -0400, DJ-Pfulio wrote:
>>> RoR work is also highly sought these days.
>>
>> I don't know for the life of me why.  A server system written in C or
>> C++ runs just as fast and if written correctly consumes far less
>> resources.  And such programmers seem to actually care about upgrades
>> working without a problem.  After fighting with several Rails apps over
>> problems such as runaway resource consumption and the inability to
>> perform upgrades as per directions supplied by the programmer, I gave up
>> on allowing that crap on my infrastructure a long time ago.
> Good morning Michael! I always look forward to your programming 
> perspectives.
> One of the reasons I stayed away from Ruby for a long time was their 
> website. I'm assuming it was in Ruby/RoR and it was often too slow to use.
> The niche I'm having fun with at the moment is learning OOP and Testing 
> while munging XML, JSON, and user input. It's amazing how many "tools" 
> IT shops buy that don't talk to each other. If I can solve some of that 
> it's a win. While Ruby isn't the most performant in terms of memory 
> usage and CPU cycles burned, it is helping me solve problems. I have 
> less time with the language than I did with C or Python, but I can do 
> more. I can also enjoy life a little, which is a big win as I get older.
> Maybe I've just gotten to be a little better at programming and am 
> picking Ruby up faster. I don't know. I am having fun and getting things 
> done. Life would be ideal if I could quit looking sideways at C or Go. 
> "Performance envy"? Maybe. I'd like to be content but every time I 
> decide to see what other opportunities are available they ask for things 
> I don't have.
> Leam
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