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    Ruby's global nightmare!

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Developers' Forum
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    • J Offline
      jhauswirth
      last edited by

      @jessejames said:

      Ah my fellow Python "brother in arms" Martin, who agrees with me, but only half way... I'm royally screwed! 😒
      😎

      But there may be someone at Google that might agree with you.
      http://www.python.org/~guido/

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      • Chris FullmerC Offline
        Chris Fullmer
        last edited by

        Jesse, its not ok to be a brat.

        Chris

        Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
        All my Plugins I've written

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        • J Offline
          jessejames
          last edited by

          @chris fullmer said:

          Jesse, its not ok to be a brat.

          Ah my old friend and sometimes nemesis Chris Fullmer, the only fellow SketchUpper i love to hate πŸ˜† πŸ˜† πŸ˜†

          Always sleep with a loaded gun under your pillow!

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          • tbdT Offline
            tbd
            last edited by

            @jessejames said:

            Are you hinting that you would like to use another language besides Ruby but have no other choices at this time?

            I will use any language that does a job better and quicker (including learning it).

            @jessejames said:

            Or maybe you just took my comments as personal attacks?

            nah.

            @jessejames said:

            I would like for you TBD (or anyone) to argue my points and defend the Ruby language if anything i said is untrue.

            I have better things to do that arguing on Ruby vs Python. yes, you said true things. now get over it and do something productive, like :

            • tutorial on how to install SuPy with
            • examples of Python scripts for Sketchup (more than creating a box),
            • expand Ruby with Python features,
            • or anything else that the community will benefit. not empty talks.

            @jessejames said:

            Discussion is a good thing, even the occasional argument.After all this is a discussion group is it not?

            flame war is also a discussion, but is not a good thing

            SketchUp Ruby Consultant | Podium 1.x developer
            http://plugins.ro

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            • D Offline
              david.
              last edited by

              jj, you're the one that's brainwashed...

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              • D Offline
                david.
                last edited by

                you're also truly an obsessive personality...

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                • D Offline
                  david.
                  last edited by

                  and, getting to be a real troll.

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                  • D Offline
                    david.
                    last edited by

                    Get Over It...

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                    • StinkieS Offline
                      Stinkie
                      last edited by

                      Nah. These boys are doing fine on their own. Besides, argueing over Ruby!?

                      Nerds! πŸ˜†

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                      • M Offline
                        MSP_Greg
                        last edited by

                        To all,

                        I don't know why I looked at this thread, but the basic premise that began it is the idea that an OS object (a file) should have an effect on namespaces in a coding environment. That, at a minimum, is a matter of personal preference.

                        I could argue that the idea is very foolish, as I want my code to define the namespace, not it's placement in a file, or the file's name.

                        If we're going to argue about X language vs Y language, might as well address serious topics, not fluff, and somewhere other than a forum about using Ruby in SketchUp.

                        Greg

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                        • D Offline
                          david.
                          last edited by

                          @msp_greg said:

                          To all,

                          I don't know why I looked at this thread, but the basic premise that began it is the idea that an OS object (a file) should have an effect on namespaces in a coding environment. That, at a minimum, is a matter of personal preference.

                          I could argue that the idea is very foolish, as I want my code to define the namespace, not it's placement in a file, or the file's name.

                          If we're going to argue about X language vs Y language, might as well address serious topics, not fluff, and somewhere other than a forum about using Ruby in SketchUp.

                          Greg

                          Agree 100%! Not sure why JJ keeps pushing this other than OCD.

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                          • J Offline
                            jessejames
                            last edited by

                            @msp_greg said:

                            I could argue that the idea is very foolish, as I want my code to define the namespace, not it's placement in a file, or the file's name.

                            What is a file? What is a script? They are both simply containers for data, right? (Am i moving to quickly for ya? i'll try to use layman's terms). So when you write a script in Ruby or Python you put some text into a file. This is the same for Ruby and Python and Perl and C and whatever language floats your boat.

                            HOWEVER, the beauty of Python's module and import mechanisms are the fact that you don't need to contain the code that is already contained in the script with more syntax! Ruby forces you to put one container into another container --this is the very definition of redundancy and defines the lunacy of the Ruby language.

                            Same goes for the end statement which is completely useless. With indention there is no need to mark the end of a block anymore. It's what we Python coders refer to as elegance. You will fund much elegance in the Python language, but only a very little in Ruby.

                            So in Ruby you will first need to create a file (or OS object as MSP_Greg has informed us) THEN you must encapsulate the code therein within a module between the tags "Module<name>" and "end" Python removes this completely unnecessary step(and many other redundancies i might add).

                            Always sleep with a loaded gun under your pillow!

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                            • R Offline
                              remus
                              last edited by

                              You could argue that python forces you to create an excessive number of files to contain your creations, though.

                              And who says i want to indent my code? i like to be able to lay out my code as i like.

                              More broadly, you can argue a lot about whats best, but as has been said we've got ruby and it isn't a bad language for SU scripting.

                              http://remusrendering.wordpress.com/

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                              • N Offline
                                NewOne
                                last edited by

                                If we complain about Ruby, what AutoCAD users say about Lisp? πŸ’š

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                                • M Offline
                                  MSP_Greg
                                  last edited by

                                  jessejames,

                                  @jessejames said:

                                  Am i moving to quickly for ya?

                                  Having written code in Python, Ruby, C#, Java, JavaScript, various dialects of Basic, and C++, probably not. Also, having a CompSci prof in the late '70's always wax on about the elegance of Pascal conditioned me to the large distinction between 'elegant' when finished, vs easy to reach 'finished.'

                                  The Python features you’re referring to would be considered simple syntax conventions by most programmers, and, hence, trivial. I'll respond anyway.

                                  1. Namespaces – Lets say I'm working on a real project, and production code will be a minimal set of files. As the code is being created, it's often helpful to have the code being worked on by itself, in a separate IDE container. Once complete, it's moved into another container that has finished code. Often, that IDE container is a file. I don't want the namespace changing if I move code between them.

                                  2. End vs indent – I've written code where there may be a lot of end statements, one after the other. Also, indenting is commonplace today. Hence, it would seem that Python's removal of statements like 'end' would be helpful, even though almost all other languages use them. Conversely, when writing code, I often leave test/debug statements on the left margin as a marker that I can delete them when the code works. I can't do that in Python.

                                  I might suggest that you read a few books like 'Design Patterns' by the 'Gang of Four' to get an idea of what the real distinctions are in programming languages. Real distinctions affect whether a framework can be moved/ported to another language, as opposed to simple syntax conventions.

                                  I might also suggest that there's plenty of others forums for your concerns. This one is for Ruby used in SketchUp.

                                  BTW, I'm ignoring the flame, otherwise we might get into that layman concept...

                                  Greg

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