I have met a couple of them in real life, and a few I have met online. The sample is not significant enough to draw any conclusions about their point of view and background.

I am more than interested in your opinions about the personality and political makeup of people who express this type of pro-C bigotry.

  • I Cast Fist
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    1511 hours ago

    In my opinion, C purists are people who REALLY need to wash their fucking dishes, touch grass and get some sunlight. They get too worked up because “all the important things are written in C”, the important things being drivers, kernel and most basic stuff that OS needs.

    Whenever one talks about performance, just reply with “use Assembly” and their argument is immediately invalidated. You can also mention networking, fault tolerance and how Erlang does a much better job than C or C++ could do, which is why “real adults with real jobs” created it in the early 90s

    But mostly, it’s ironic that they’re becoming C-Conservatives, blaming the “hot new language” for bringing “the kids”. You can read the same kind of logic and disdain for C programmers, from LISP programmers, in the Unix Hater’s Handbook (1994)

  • @Feathercrown
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    14 hours ago

    They see the scale of high-level to low-level languages. They see that C is on the human-practical low end of this scale. They ascribe value to being on the low end of the scale. Tada! C is now objectively™ the best language!

  • Noble Shift
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    2917 hours ago

    Be language agnostic and use the correct tool for the job.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      It’s crazy to me that people don’t do this, once you’ve learned a few languages you can basically just pick up new ones straight away (assuming they don’t use entirely foreign concepts like Rust does)

  • @sudo42
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    1718 hours ago

    Very few people have a truly diverse software experience base. Many humans without a large, diverse experience base have trouble imagining there are problems outside their own experience.
    There are millions of different problems that need software solutions. People with limited experience have opinions as to the “best” software.
    People with large, diverse experience bases tend to be a bit more circumspect and can understand there is no single best answer. The “best” software for a given task depends on many things, including the problem, the schedule, the availability of resources, etc.

  • @SanndyTheManndy
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    2319 hours ago

    They are wrong. The correct answer is Rust. Have a great day.

  • @[email protected]
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    3021 hours ago

    C++ is pretty awesome but anyone who thinks a single language is the solution to all problems is dumb… unless you’re smart enough to realize that the one language to rule them all is PHP of course!

    • @[email protected]
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      18 minutes ago

      I hope that last part wasn’t a joke at PHP’s expense.

      I am actually surprised what PHP can do over the past few years. We converted a few critical REST APIs into PHP and it wasn’t just lightning fast, it’s also incredibly readable that we had non-PHP developers convinced it was the right move.

    • Scrubbles
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      2621 hours ago

      If there is anything I’ve learned in my 10+ years as an engineer, it’s that there are no good or bad languages, just pros and cons of each in different applications.

      Except NodeJS. Never use JavaScript on the backend.

      • @Feathercrown
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        814 hours ago

        You’re all just mad that JS stole your niche /s

        • @[email protected]
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          39 hours ago

          For small programs and scripting, Node is amazing. I’ve even written some CLI utilities in Node as standalone executables. I think most people who bash it have either never used it, or haven’t used it lately.

    • Phoenixz
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      214 hours ago

      PHP is effin awesome, I solve almost everything with it, and fast

  • Aeris Irides
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    817 hours ago

    I think some people really like iso/iec standards while others find standards “annoying”.

  • @[email protected]
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    2123 hours ago

    As an older coder, I’ve spent time commercially programming in a lot of languages (C, C++, C#, Python, TransactSQL, Javascript, and a few more - with many years of experience in each. I even spent time squeezing some forth code into a small programmable chip.

    My first comment on this « attitude » expressed above is that you need to pick the language (and its libraries) that is best for your problem space - each will have advantages, including constructs and libraries to suit whatever domain you are working in. Hence forth for a microchip, TransactSQL for DB stored procs, python for general purpose command line work etc.

    Having said that I do want to present one viewpoint which could give rise to this above expressed opinion. It’s an area that C is considered pretty strong - specifically language complexity. When coding in C, I really felt like I knew every nook and cranny of the language, exactly how every structure would be packed, what the assembly would probably look like.

    Python (and perhaps C#) are currently my favorite languages - python only has 36 keywords and while I don’t have the same solid grasp of what’s happening under the hood, I do feel like there are very few surprises and corner cases to the language, even while supporting some complex programming methodologies.

    The opposite of this is (IMHO) swift. What started as a really nice language with a clean syntax and solid libraries has morphed into a monster with 232 keywords. Does any swift programmer have a solid grasp of it all?

    I would say that C++ is at the complicated end of the spectrum - spend some time inside Boost and their extreme use of templates/meta-programming and it will make your head spin. The Boost developers are super smart people, but its non-trivial to understand what is going on. Having said that, C++ does make you feel that you can code close to the machine and have a good handle on what is happening under the hood.

    This level of control is probably one place where this « only C and C++ code is any good » attitude came from. Its not an attitude I support.

    • @gedhrel
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      213 hours ago

      C++ is one if those languages where writing a library feels hugely different from using it. Boost is a case in point here: there are brilliant peiple behind it, but (error messages aside) the ergonomics of using thise libs in an application are usually pretty good.

      (Scala felt similar to me. There are other languages where it feels much less like I’m swapping hats as I flip between parts of a codebase.)

  • @[email protected]
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    341 day ago

    It’s no different from anyone else with arbitrary, narrow-minded views. People like that, whether they realize it or not, don’t believe in the intrinsic value of personhood.

    This extends to their view of themselves and creates a need to feel valuable for some other reason. So they create a narrow idea of what it means to be good and valuable and it just so happens to align with their own traits, interests, and beliefs.

    • @Feathercrown
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      414 hours ago

      Every take I see in this thread gets more and more based

  • @[email protected]
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    1723 hours ago

    “First we get rid of strict typing. What’s next, setting a boolean variable equal to a string?!?”

    If you look back at the arguments against interracial marriage, they mirror almost all of the arguments against gay marriage to the letter. Some people are convinced that their world as it exists when they come of age to participate in it is the way it should always be. So my bet is that their deal is they don’t want to learn anything new. Learning can be hard and it’s not always fun to learn and more importantly the global capitalist society constructed for us is not conducive to learning so people are greatly encouraged NOT to learn.

    • @Feathercrown
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      614 hours ago

      Wild words to use on a post about C but tbh I might agree with you

  • @[email protected]
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    191 day ago

    Many programmers that work in Low level languages like Assembly or C regard high level languages as easy or slow and thus tended to dis them.

    John Carmack (Doom, Quake engine, considered an amazing programmer) Best Programming Language has a wider appreciation of IDEs and Languages.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 day ago

      I took an assembly language course once. You know those merge games where you eventually get to double or quadruple your producer’s output? Coding in assembly feels like being stuck on 1x, where you have to generate all the basic stuff first, and then build on it, then build on it some more. It takes forever.

      I liked understanding the why behind it. But I appreciate other languages that are more accessible.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 day ago

        Yep, it can also be the answer to getting insane performance gains for extremely specific functions / calculations.

        The reality of life is the higher level languages let you get more done with fewer errors but with less potential performance… You can only optimize python so much. Some newer languages like Rust try to balance the two but often make things more complex.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 day ago

    The best way to engage them is to ask them about their projects. I usually find them to be very knowledgeable, have a lot to learn from, that you can mix in with your more recent languages.

    Win/win beats calling eachother bigot :)

  • @finitebanjo
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    I haven’t really met those people for about a decade, but before modern languages with superior security but still usable like Rust we only had Java, C, C++, C#, and Assembly for the more advanced, thoughtful, and professional programing workflows.

    (At this point in time COBOL and Fortran was already almost exclusively Legacy use).

    If you wrote Python or Apache Groovy in an office space where you collaborate with others, you were an oddity. Or maybe you worked at the NSA, because oddly they use a lot of that on their github.

    Of course, we now have IDEs that let you work professionally with basically any language, so it’s all moot, now.

    There is still some negative sentiment against any and all high-level languages because the more that is automated the less its users understand about programming or computer logic.