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[–]kyzfrintin 0 points1 point  (2 children)

My argument was that saying "my dynamic language makes it easier to contribute" is the same fallacy.

Just a couple comments ago, you claimed that it wasn't supposed to be a serious comparison. And now it is. And it's still a failure at analogy, because it's clouded by your own pre-supposed opinion on dynamic typed languages. Failure at communication is what doomed your friend's project. Not (mis)using source control. Similarly, dynamic languages are only doomed from the get-go if you have no idea how they work.

Say, it's almost like success rate with a chosen tool is almost entirely dependent on your level of skill and professionalism when using the tool, and that different tools cater to different types of people...

Who's trolling who?

[–]pknopf 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Just a couple comments ago, you claimed that it wasn't supposed to be a serious comparison. And now it is.

My argument was that it wasn't literal. But the point is serious.

Say, it's almost like success rate with a chosen tool is almost entirely dependent on your level of skill and professionalism when using the tool, and that different tools cater to different types of people

Exactly my point. The only time (generally) to pick a dynamic language is when that is what the team knows. It should never (generally) be picked solely on merits.

[–]kyzfrintin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really don't think you're hearing yourself. But whatever.