[DUG] Company closing
Jolyon Smith
jsmith at deltics.co.nz
Mon Nov 29 11:42:31 NZDT 2010
And more importantly, the crucial thing is knowing which is the right/best
one to use for any particular problem at hand.
-----Original Message-----
From: delphi-bounces at delphi.org.nz [mailto:delphi-bounces at delphi.org.nz] On
Behalf Of Alister Christie
Sent: Monday, 29 November 2010 11:27
To: NZ Borland Developers Group - Delphi List
Subject: Re: [DUG] Company closing
From my experience, learning a new language is fairly easy and straight
forward, but the libraries are just so huge these days, it's impossible
to learn even a small fraction in a reasonable amount of time.
For instance in Delphi - if you wanted some sort of collection of
strings. If you are just using object pascal you could use an array or
write your own class (or linked list of Records at a stretch). Add all
the standard libraries and you could use a TStringList, TList, TStack,
some sort of generic collection (list, stack, queue, hash) and probably
a zillion of other things.
Alister Christie
Computers for People
Ph: 04 471 1849 Fax: 04 471 1266
http://www.salespartner.co.nz
PO Box 13085
Johnsonville
Wellington
On 29/11/2010 10:37 a.m., Berend de Boer wrote:
>>>>>> "Alistair" == Alistair Ward<award at forum8.co.nz> writes:
> Alistair> I'm firmly of the belief that for a good developer the
> Alistair> toolset being used is irrelevant. A person with the
> Alistair> right background and fundamental skills can pick up any
> Alistair> programming language/environment in relatively short
> Alistair> order.
>
> I think that is quite misguided. To become productive in a new
> environment, takes years. It does not matter how good you think you
> are.
>
> To be productive in an environment you simply need to know a lot of
> little things. That takes time.
>
> If you switch to an entirely different platform, 1-tier to REST for
> example, you might never truly
> make it.
>
>
> Alistair> I picked up Delphi (v2) very quickly, coming from a
> Alistair> previous background of C and C++, although I had done a
> Alistair> lot of Pascal at university. I have to say that I'm not
> Alistair> looking forward to going back to curly braces...
>
> But now we're talking about languages that are basically the same with
> a minor difference in syntax. The C++/Delpi/VB switch might be as you
> describe, switching to PHP + the entire web development stack takes
> much longer.
>
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