Which LISP should I learn? Years ago I read about Scheme and wrote some hello world level code. I learned about lambda functions and currying. I also looked at racket. A few years ago, much of my day job involved the JVM and I was getting sick of Java so I got a book on Clojure, which is a very nice language, but I never wrote any.
A few days ago I downloaded and built the latest version of DrRacket.
Should I go straight to Haskell? Or what about other functional languages? Is Erlang worth a look?
I need something stimulating to distract my brain from the mundane nature of everyday life, and mediocre programming languages.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by DannyB on Monday December 06 2021, @03:40PM (2 children)
If you go with 173 instead of 175 then your total record length is 748 instead of 750, and all your other field positions are wrong. If you assume that it is length which is wrong, then all other field positions line up, record length if 750 and everything else fits correctly. So the preponderance of the evidence is that there is a single small mistake, instead of all other field positions and the record length being wrong for the "B" record.
Young people won't believe you if you say you used to get Netflix by US Postal Mail.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 06 2021, @10:22PM (1 child)
Maybe I am misreading you, but where did I suggest the alternative?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 06 2021, @11:36PM
I think I got it. That last sentence is missing its introductory phrase of "if you really cared" that I could have sworn I added.