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Sometimes the storyline just needs to be, your a big angry animal and you want to trash stuff. Rampage it is. Or a plumber that hates fungus and reptiles.
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I agree with that. The fallout franchise for example would do well with just setting you free without a single "main" storyline to get through. Their individual storylines are usually dodgy even though the overall lore is good. Just let you make a mess of things and otherwise try to survive, with different questlines being chosen as you see fit. Mini stories are harder to make a mess of IMHO.
Although with the size of video game budgets these days they could always just hire better writers.
But maybe there's a tradeoff between playability and plot. I mean, I can imagine it's hard to craft a storyline around beating people up all the time and have a plot more engaging than your average kung-fu flick *hides*
Real programmers use butterflies
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Makes total sense to me!
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As opposed to: (let's pick up the currently most played games):
- You have blocks of different types that you can pile up.
- Or, you have to seek and kill everybody.
Believe me, the one you described is already quite elaborated.
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I offered you a path to righteousness in game play - and indeed you were gracious
BUT
Your time seems wasted spent on these action-packed amusements that even you recognize to be just a tad absurd.
(Sigh).
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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Meh, amusements are what they are. It's not like lockdown has left me with much else to do, and I'm struggling for inspiration in terms of coding right now.
Real programmers use butterflies
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C is FAST
Java is POPULAR
Ruby is COOL
Python is BEAUTIFUL
PHP
JavaScript is AWESOME
Haskell is INTRIGUING
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Why ?
Also, in some cases, like VB6, it's the user and not the language, or maybe both.
No reason to stop unless you know something better to do.
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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In the day VB6 was great for building quick desktop apps, but when .net was released, those developers should have jumped ship and started migrating all that legacy code when there was still a upgrade wizard to 90% move them to .net 1.0
but they didn't, or were not allowed to by their companies; if the latter case they should have left. I saw the writing on the wall in the beta previews, and got busy learning it.
Those who are still furiously hanging on to VB6 likely should be mocked, it's 20 years out of date and should never be touched again. It would be like people still developing in FoxDB, VBA, or J++, it's a dead platform.
Oddly enough I don't feel the same about COBAL, technically it's still has an active 'platform', and much of our infrastructure is built on it. The same for C, it's going to stay active in the embedded industry for the long term.
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I'd argue that C is useful for writing *new* code as opposed to COBOL. For such an old language it has weathered the test of time - something impressive for anything computer based. C was just designed well. Given C++ is more advanced, but if you're coding in C++ the way it was designed to be used the binaries will almost always be much larger than C binaries due to the use of templates/generic programming, meaning C is still the order of the day for small machines and probably will be for the foreseeable future. As such I don't think it's exactly comparable to COBOL.
My $0.02
Real programmers use butterflies
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honey the codewitch wrote: C was just designed well. JEEEEZ....
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That's easy to say, but the fact that it is still in use today speaks volumes for a language developed in the very early 1970s. A lot of other languages have come and gone since then.
Real programmers use butterflies
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No argument.
You sure can't beat C in the embedded area, lots of those chips are still 8bit with 1k memory or less. The bigger 32bit RISK chips, sure use C++ if it helps keep you organized. I've found the less abstraction layers to the IO, the closer to real time you get. There have been a few new languages biting at C toes like Rust or D, and they've ventured in to the embedded arena a bit; should be interesting to watch.
Just my opinion but C++ has always felt like Wenger 16999 Swiss Army Knife Giant[^] when all you really needed was Uncle Henry Rancher[^]
My only reason to mention COBAL is IBM is still producing those mainframes mostly to keep those systems running. The COVID-19 crisis shows there is still a need for COBAL developers to extend or modify and maintain these legacy systems. Now I wouldn't suggest a newly released CS student take that direction as a career, since eventually they will be phased out sometime in my life time I would guess/hope.
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The fact that you can use C++ with so many different paradigms (OOP, generic programming, procedural, even functional programming these days) leads to a lot of misuse, but its power in that regard is amazing. You can use it to do domain-specific-language style coding. In terms of this flexibility, it's unmatched.
The problem is, C++ isn't taught well, so it often isn't used well. It's not OO primarily. It's power comes primarily from templates so generic programming is the order of the day. A $20 book called Accelerated C++ is better at teaching C++ than all the courses one took to get that shiny lil CS degree.
I've seen so much OO C++ code in my time it's just silly. MFC comes to mind.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I don't hate PHP but I'm just not particularly excited about its existence.
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Sander Rossel wrote: JavaScript is AWESOME
I know a lot of people who no longer believe you can spell: "AWFUL" has no 'E's, no 'S's, no 'O's, and no 'M's ... but we knew what you meant.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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You are absolutely right: we need to get serious, and admit that all programming languages suck ... except the one, or two, we really like.
«One day it will have to be officially admitted that what we have christened reality is an even greater illusion than the world of dreams.» Salvador Dali
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When I say anything good about Java it's sarcasm, and not hidden
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Well said.
BTW, you missed out "and c# is better than all those POS"
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I got it from Facebook, but it was a Twitter screenshot, so probably a screenshot from the CodeProject Twitter account on the CodeProject Facebook page which I now shared back on CodeProject
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Now you just need to take a blurry picture of the screen with your phone, paste it into a Word document, fax that document to yourself, scan it in, and then upload the scan to Facebook.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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TIL that CodeProject is on Twitter.
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