Would you attend a technical talk titled, "Why writing Scala is unethical", followed up by a technical workshop (with exercises) titled, "In case you are still unsure that writing Scala is unethical"?
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Replying to @KenScambler
What is not positive about stating matters of fact, and educating others to help them understand those facts?
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Replying to @dibblego @KenScambler
TBH I'd rather see talks around what are the good haskell libraries, and how to structure a project. What works / what doesn't, what are going to be traps folks from outside of the haskell world fall into.
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Replying to @jonoabroad @KenScambler
but it's not about "because Haskell exists." The primary goal is not to know that writing Scala is unethical, but to be equipped with the technical tools to know why. No amount of Haskell leads to this conclusion.
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Replying to @dibblego @KenScambler
I may have been attempting to ignore scala and just focus on where my area of interest now is :P
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Scala exists. We all pay the penalty of this.
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