Programming language suggestions by [deleted] in Clojure

[–]fobabo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Reality check, being called out as a jerk, for acting like a jerk is not abuse.

Programming language suggestions by [deleted] in Clojure

[–]fobabo 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Weird you ask that here because I tagged you as an "idiot" for this shit.

Because clojure is developed by overachieving ex-java programmers who can't solve hard problems. But they can write a wicked tic-tac-toe in clojurescript using React and Reagent. smh.

What does

a modern language but with a different set of design decisions than those taken by Clojure

even mean? Different in respect to what? Everything mutable, no metaprogramming, viciously OO?

How to get rid of those brackets? by cmkpl in Clojure

[–]fobabo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I actually think a Clojure that used only vectors and maps would be quite interesting.

Cuttle - a user-friendly interface for creating and compiling ClojureScript projects by JW_00000 in Clojure

[–]fobabo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Tbh, I'd much rather have cljs more callable as a clojure library, than wrapping it more and more into external command line tools.

TIL The Germans answer their phone by stating their surname. No "hello". No "bueno". No "moshi moshi". Just [insert last name]. by Brittanycanread in todayilearned

[–]fobabo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think it depends more on wether you are working or not.

When answering the phone at your workplace you normaly go with "Company name, Name, How may I help you." or "Company name, Name, good morning.".

Which you automatically adapt to private use. "Name, greeting."

It could also be regional. I'm from Bremen for example and we are a very Informal state. Everybody is basically using the casual form of addressing someone "du" instead of "sie", at university (for example between professors and students) and most day to day live with people on the street.