No, I am dead serious. We all take it extremely seriously. I have no idea how you reached a conclusion otherwise. Because of "projections of personal opinions and preference"? What do you think the rubbish documents contain?
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Replying to @dibblego
Thats fair, a coc generally contains community preferences. I was mainly referring to “Don’t use scala. Not even then.” The rest is strait forward, actionable and useful. I don’t think this is a technical position, but rather a personal preference based on passes disputes.
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Replying to @eliaskjordan
It is very very very very very very very very very definitely a technical position. It is a widely held position, though if you are relatively new to Scala, you probably don't know that. I had zero contribution to that part of our CoC.
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Replying to @dibblego
I know there are some people who hold that opinion. Mainly by people who think pure FP is the one true way. Scala doesn’t really shine for pure FP, so I can understand the reasoning for those people. From what I’ve seen, I wouldn’t say it’s a widely held opinion though.
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Replying to @eliaskjordan
No. From people who know Scala well. This division into "people who think pure FP is the one true way" is a part of the narrative that you have fallen into adopting. It doesn't exist. It's entirely a fabrication. You believe it's not widely held due to an understandable bias.
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Replying to @dibblego
Ok, so what are the key technical points that make scala unusable in your opinion? (I’m truly interested in knowing if there is something I’m missing)
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Replying to @eliaskjordan
Well, again, twitter cannot do justice to such an excellent and important question. Here is a *very generous* run down. https://www.reddit.com/r/haskell/comments/1pjjy5/odersky_the_trouble_with_types_strange_loop_2013/cd3bgcu/ …
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Replying to @dibblego
I have seen that post before.
@kemtt is squarely in the pure FP camp, and the issues mentioned primarily arise when doing pure FP. I don't agree that those limitations make Scala unusable. There are many successful companies that use Scala heavily, with great success.2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @eliaskjordan @kemtt
Try to address the specifics of the post, instead of the properties of the person. I know it's The Scala Way to discard critical analysis in favour of properties of a person, but it won't help you in the end. No, there are no successful companies because of Scala.
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2/ Will happily write something up to address the points specifically, but it won't fit in a tweet.
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Goodo. Just to be clear, it is a very generous critique. I look forward to a response. Those who know Scala well have discussed this subject at great length and continue to do so. You're welcome to join that discussion.
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