C Syntax

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  • C# Learner

    C Syntax

    Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?

    In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby programmers to scare away
    potential "n00bs"? If so, and after 50+ years of programming research,
    why are programming languages still being designed with C's syntax?

    These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...
  • Alex Moskalyuk

    #2
    Chinese Syntax

    Why is Chinese syntax so uneasy on the eye?

    In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby linguists to scare away
    potential "n00bs"? If so, and after 5000+ years of civilization,
    why do Chinese people still using that funny syntax?

    These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...


    Comment

    • Mike Wahler

      #3
      Re: C Syntax


      "C# Learner" <csharp@learner .here> wrote in message
      news:uLRM6T2QEH A.3732@TK2MSFTN GP11.phx.gbl...[color=blue]
      > Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?[/color]

      I don't find it so, but that's really a subjective issue.
      Of course for folks who are new to it, it does take some
      'getting used to'.
      [color=blue]
      >
      > In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby programmers to scare away
      > potential "n00bs"?[/color]

      No, I think it's simply trying to be concise and 'to the point'.
      [color=blue]
      >If so, and after 50+ years of programming research,
      > why are programming languages still being designed with C's syntax?[/color]

      Some are, some use other types of syntax. If you don't like it,
      well, use something else. :-)
      [color=blue]
      >
      > These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...[/color]

      "Think about snakes."
      -Tony Robbins.

      :-)

      -Mike


      Comment

      • Eric Sosman

        #4
        Re: C Syntax

        C# Learner wrote:[color=blue]
        > Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?
        >
        > In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby programmers to scare away
        > potential "n00bs"? If so, and after 50+ years of programming research,
        > why are programming languages still being designed with C's syntax?
        >
        > These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...[/color]

        If you want COBOL, you know where to find it.

        --
        Eric.Sosman@sun .com

        Comment

        • Mark A. Odell

          #5
          Re: C Syntax

          C# Learner <csharp@learner .here> wrote in
          news:uLRM6T2QEH A.3732@TK2MSFTN GP11.phx.gbl:
          [color=blue]
          > These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...[/color]

          I would sleep more often then.



          --
          - Mark ->
          --

          Comment

          • Martin Ambuhl

            #6
            Re: C Syntax

            C# Learner wrote:
            [color=blue]
            > Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?[/color]

            Because it's so pretty. That it is "uneasy on [your] eye" is your
            problem. Not to worry; there's a solution for your problem. Jesus said
            it, and it appears three times in the Gospels:

            Matthew 5:29 And if thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast
            it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members
            should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell.

            Matthew 18:9 And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it
            from thee: it is better for thee to enter into life with one eye, rather
            than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire.

            Mark 9:47 And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is better for
            thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one eye, than having two eyes
            to be cast into hell fire:

            Comment

            • Default User

              #7
              Re: C Syntax

              C# Learner wrote:[color=blue]
              >
              > Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?
              >
              > In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby programmers to scare away
              > potential "n00bs"? If so, and after 50+ years of programming research,
              > why are programming languages still being designed with C's syntax?
              >
              > These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...[/color]

              Go troll somebody else.

              *plonk*




              Brian Rodenborn

              Comment

              • C# Learner

                #8
                Re: Chinese Syntax

                Alex Moskalyuk wrote:
                [color=blue]
                > Why is Chinese syntax so uneasy on the eye?[/color]

                <snip>

                You make a perfectly valid counter-argument.

                I think we can conclude, then, that humans, in general, are a pretty
                /stupid/ species. Note that this is /not/ a shallow thought.

                Another example showing human stupidity, which is also related to
                natural languages, is the fact that there are /so many/ natural
                languages spoken by humans. Of cource, more than one natural language
                is redundant, and causes problems involved with translation.

                By the way, it's nice to see someone actually being able to provide a
                decent counter-argument on a newsgroup without having to resort to
                name-calling.

                Comment

                • Alex Moskalyuk

                  #9
                  Re: Chinese Syntax

                  Have you ever looked into Perl or Lisp code?

                  C suddenly starts making perfect sense.

                  What's uneasy to you? Curly braces, parentheses, keywords, or something
                  else?


                  --
                  Alex Moskalyuk
                  _______________ ______________


                  "C# Learner" <csharp@learner .here> wrote in message
                  news:O2Jgg82QEH A.3728@TK2MSFTN GP10.phx.gbl...[color=blue]
                  > Alex Moskalyuk wrote:
                  >[color=green]
                  > > Why is Chinese syntax so uneasy on the eye?[/color]
                  >
                  > <snip>
                  >
                  > You make a perfectly valid counter-argument.
                  >
                  > I think we can conclude, then, that humans, in general, are a pretty
                  > /stupid/ species. Note that this is /not/ a shallow thought.
                  >
                  > Another example showing human stupidity, which is also related to
                  > natural languages, is the fact that there are /so many/ natural
                  > languages spoken by humans. Of cource, more than one natural language
                  > is redundant, and causes problems involved with translation.
                  >
                  > By the way, it's nice to see someone actually being able to provide a
                  > decent counter-argument on a newsgroup without having to resort to
                  > name-calling.[/color]


                  Comment

                  • Martin Dickopp

                    #10
                    [OT] Re: Chinese Syntax

                    C# Learner <csharp@learner .here> writes:
                    [color=blue]
                    > By the way, it's nice to see someone actually being able to provide a
                    > decent counter-argument on a newsgroup without having to resort to
                    > name-calling.[/color]

                    While your original flamebait wasn't particularly an example of decency
                    on your part, at least have the decency to stop posting off-topic *now*,
                    please.

                    If you really believe that the intention of Alex' reply was to start
                    an elaborate discussion about the Chinese language in comp.lang.c,
                    I recommend that you stay off Usenet until you have learned to pick up
                    hints.

                    Off-topic, therefore Followup-To: poster.

                    Martin


                    --
                    ,--. Martin Dickopp, Dresden, Germany ,= ,-_-. =.
                    / ,- ) http://www.zero-based.org/ ((_/)o o(\_))
                    \ `-' `-'(. .)`-'
                    `-. Debian, a variant of the GNU operating system. \_/

                    Comment

                    • C# Learner

                      #11
                      Re: Chinese Syntax

                      Alex Moskalyuk wrote:
                      [color=blue]
                      > Have you ever looked into Perl or Lisp code?
                      >
                      > C suddenly starts making perfect sense.
                      >
                      > What's uneasy to you? Curly braces, parentheses, keywords, or something
                      > else?[/color]

                      One of the biggest flaws in C syntax, in my opinion, is the required
                      parentheses for test conditions.

                      Here's a very simple example:

                      void Foo
                      {
                      if (FooBar(Parse(P rocess(GetInput ())))
                      DoSomething();
                      }

                      Imagine if, instead, we could write the following:

                      void Foo
                      {
                      if FooBar(Parse(Pr ocess(GetInput( ))):
                      DoSomething();
                      }

                      Python uses such a construct for test conditions.

                      Another nicety about Python is the fact that whitespace is used for
                      defining code blocks. This makes code much clearer than the equivalent
                      C code, which requires block being/end markers.

                      Here's a very simple Python code sample:
                      http://www.kernelthread.com/hanoi/html/py.html .

                      Try staring at it for one minute.

                      After having done so, take a look at this:
                      http://www.kernelthread.com/hanoi/html/c.html .

                      Even if one's accustomed to C syntax, the former is still clearer and
                      easier-to-read, don't you think?

                      Every time I see code that conforms to C's basic syntax, I cringe; yet I
                      write such code every day.

                      Why C? Why?!

                      Comment

                      • Lew Pitcher

                        #12
                        Re: C Syntax

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                        Eric Sosman wrote:
                        | C# Learner wrote:
                        |
                        |> Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?
                        |>
                        |> In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby programmers to scare
                        |> away potential "n00bs"? If so, and after 50+ years of programming
                        |> research, why are programming languages still being designed with C's
                        |> syntax?
                        |>
                        |> These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...
                        |
                        |
                        | If you want COBOL, you know where to find it.
                        |

                        I resemble that remark! :-)

                        FWIW, if you want a computer language that's really "uneasy on the eye", try
                        APL or RPG2. Even Lisp isn't very easy to read.

                        OTOH, I've had to read through pages of Java recently (analysis and design of
                        a new web component for my corporate masters, requiring review of our current
                        j2ee web apps), and if Java is the new "readabilit y", then give me C any day.
                        Worse spaghetti code than you could find in any assembly program. I have no
                        doubt that C# and C++ are just as bad.




                        - --
                        Lew Pitcher

                        Master Codewright & JOAT-in-training | GPG public key available on request
                        Registered Linux User #112576 (http://counter.li.org/)
                        Slackware - Because I know what I'm doing.
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                        Comment

                        • Justin Rogers

                          #13
                          Re: Chinese Syntax

                          As a long time programmer of many languages I've always found the explicit
                          statement bounding in C to be quite nice. For me it improves readability as
                          my seasoned internal tokenizer is capable of finding code blocks more quickly
                          by using the braces and parenthesis than by scanning whitespace. Whitespace
                          also breaks down quite fast when you start using non fixed width fonts and
                          mixing tabs and spaces. Arguably you could say, don't do that, but at least
                          with something of the nature of C and it's explit block scoping you can easily
                          write a pretty printer and avoid any ambiguity that would otherwise exist.

                          Take the following excerpt from a Python tutorial:
                          Tuple syntax

                          From a syntax viewpoint, you create a tuple by placing a sequence of items
                          inside a pair of enclosing parentheses and separating them by commas. Note that
                          the parentheses can be omitted when such omission will not lead to ambiguity.

                          Note that they point out you can leave out parens only when it won't lead to
                          ambiguity. C doesn't make that mistake. They make sure there is no ambiguity,
                          and if you leave out a parens it doesn't make the statement ambiguous, it makes
                          it
                          a different or erroneous statement altogether.


                          --
                          Justin Rogers
                          DigiTec Web Consultants, LLC.
                          Blog: http://weblogs.asp.net/justin_rogers


                          "C# Learner" <csharp@learner .here> wrote in message
                          news:euOxH13QEH A.3744@TK2MSFTN GP10.phx.gbl...[color=blue]
                          > Alex Moskalyuk wrote:
                          >[color=green]
                          > > Have you ever looked into Perl or Lisp code?
                          > >
                          > > C suddenly starts making perfect sense.
                          > >
                          > > What's uneasy to you? Curly braces, parentheses, keywords, or something
                          > > else?[/color]
                          >
                          > One of the biggest flaws in C syntax, in my opinion, is the required
                          > parentheses for test conditions.
                          >
                          > Here's a very simple example:
                          >
                          > void Foo
                          > {
                          > if (FooBar(Parse(P rocess(GetInput ())))
                          > DoSomething();
                          > }
                          >
                          > Imagine if, instead, we could write the following:
                          >
                          > void Foo
                          > {
                          > if FooBar(Parse(Pr ocess(GetInput( ))):
                          > DoSomething();
                          > }
                          >
                          > Python uses such a construct for test conditions.
                          >
                          > Another nicety about Python is the fact that whitespace is used for
                          > defining code blocks. This makes code much clearer than the equivalent
                          > C code, which requires block being/end markers.
                          >
                          > Here's a very simple Python code sample:
                          > http://www.kernelthread.com/hanoi/html/py.html .
                          >
                          > Try staring at it for one minute.
                          >
                          > After having done so, take a look at this:
                          > http://www.kernelthread.com/hanoi/html/c.html .
                          >
                          > Even if one's accustomed to C syntax, the former is still clearer and
                          > easier-to-read, don't you think?
                          >
                          > Every time I see code that conforms to C's basic syntax, I cringe; yet I
                          > write such code every day.
                          >
                          > Why C? Why?![/color]


                          Comment

                          • C# Learner

                            #14
                            Re: [OT] Re: Chinese Syntax

                            ["Followup-To:" to to microsoft.publi c.dotnet.langua ges.csharp]

                            Martin Dickopp wrote:
                            [color=blue]
                            > C# Learner <csharp@learner .here> writes:
                            >[color=green]
                            >>By the way, it's nice to see someone actually being able to provide a
                            >>decent counter-argument on a newsgroup without having to resort to
                            >>name-calling.[/color]
                            >
                            > While your original flamebait[/color]

                            My intention was /not/ to start a flame war, but to start a healthy
                            discussion on the subject of C and why its basic syntax is present in so
                            many modern programming languages.

                            If I had asked that question simply and directly, I doubt that many
                            would've given it a second thought. This is unfortunate detail to keep
                            in mind when posting to USENET, or other such Internet forums. There
                            needs to be a little spice to get a discussion going. This is what was
                            provided by myself in my thread-starter.
                            [color=blue]
                            > wasn't particularly an example of decency
                            > on your part, at least have the decency to stop posting off-topic *now*,
                            > please.[/color]

                            Oh, now that Martin's joined the fray, we're no longer allowed to
                            continue a discussion which has a sub-thread which is /ever so slightly/
                            off-topic. Hmph.
                            [color=blue]
                            > If you really believe that the intention of Alex' reply was to start
                            > an elaborate discussion about the Chinese language in comp.lang.c,[/color]

                            Please take the time to /read/ the messages you're replying to. My
                            reply only just touches on the subject of the Chinese language. My
                            intention was /not/ to start an elaborate discussion about the Chinese
                            language.
                            [color=blue]
                            > I recommend that you stay off Usenet until you have learned to pick up
                            > hints.[/color]


                            [color=blue]
                            > Off-topic, therefore Followup-To: poster.[/color]

                            I have no intention to e-mail my reply directly to you, so I disregarded
                            that follow-up. From the tone of your reply, it seems that had I given
                            you my e-mail address, I'd be harassed!

                            I've set follow-ups to microsoft.publi c.dotnet.langua ges.csharp, since
                            people in there are cool. However, my experience has shown that the
                            people in comp.lang.c, on the other hand, are a bunch of snobby a*******s!

                            I've posted in that group before and I got flamed in reply almost every
                            time. I also lurk in that group and notice that even regulars get
                            /regularly/ flamed there, for little or no reason.

                            Yeah, yeah, call me a troll. Whatever. This is my opinion, and you
                            asked for it by /flaming/ me.

                            Anyway, as I said, I'm not going to e-mail you, and may well proceed to
                            plonk you due to your heavy-handedness and your apparent snobby attitude.

                            Goodbye.

                            Comment

                            • Lew Pitcher

                              #15
                              [OT] Re: C Syntax

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                              C# Learner wrote:
                              | Why is C syntax so uneasy on the eye?

                              I would disagree with that assertion; I do not find C syntax "uneasy on the eye".

                              | In its day, was it _really_ designed by snobby programmers to scare away
                              | potential "n00bs"?

                              "It's day" is hardly over, and the designers of C had other things on their
                              minds than attempting to scare away neophytes.

                              | If so, and after 50+ years of programming research,
                              | why are programming languages still being designed with C's syntax?

                              Perhaps because it works?

                              | These questions drive me insane. Every waking minute...

                              These are trivialities. Learn five or six computer languages (or three or four
                              that are entirely unrelated to each other), /then/ formulate your opinion.

                              Just remember, the computer doesn't care what language the program is written
                              in; it's all machine language to the CPU. Computer 'language' is for /human/
                              consumption, and is designed to meet the needs of the programmer and his/her
                              environment. Some languages are exceedingly suscinct (i.e. APL or RPG), and
                              some are very verbose (i.e. COBOL, SNOBOL, PL/I, Assembly (any processor)).
                              Some languages are procedural, some are OO, some are list processors, some are
                              macro languages. Learn a few, see what they do and where they are used.

                              Only then can you conduct a reasonable conversation on the topic.

                              - --
                              Lew Pitcher

                              Master Codewright & JOAT-in-training | GPG public key available on request
                              Registered Linux User #112576 (http://counter.li.org/)
                              Slackware - Because I know what I'm doing.
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                              Comment

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