• Glome@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      Java has many abstractions that can be beneficial in certain circumstances. However, it forces a design principle that may not work best in every situation.

      I.e. inheritance can be both unnatural for the programmer to think in, and is not representative of how data is stored and manipulated on a computer.

      • lightsecond@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We’re gate-keeping the most mainstream programming language now? Next you’ll say English isn’t a real language because it doesn’t have a native verb tense to express hearsay.

      • kaba0@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        And it is not forced at all. Noone holds a gun to your head to write extends. “Favor composition over inheritance” has been said as a mantra for at least a decade

      • kaba0@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Memory is an implementation detail. You are interested in solving problems, not pushing bytes around, unless that is the problem itself. In 99% of the cases though, you don’t need guns and knives, it’s not a US. school (sorry)

      • LeFantome@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I do not like Java but this is a strange argument. The people that invented Java felt that most of the C language should be wrapped in unsafe.

        Opinions can vary but saying Java is not a real language is evidence free name calling. One could just as easily say that any language that does not allow you to differentiate between safe and unsafe baheviour is incomplete and not a “real” language. It is not just the Java and C# people that may say this. As a C fan, I am sure you have heard Rust people scoff at C as a legacy language that was fine for its day but clearly outclassed now that the “real” languages have arrived. Are you any more correct than they are?