26 Jun 2012 05:23
Re: becoming a developer [was: Re: Issues with emacs]
rusi <rustompmody <at> gmail.com>
2012-06-26 03:23:36 GMT
2012-06-26 03:23:36 GMT
On Jun 26, 8:03 am, ken <geb... <at> mousecar.com> wrote: > On 06/25/2012 02:02 PM Sivaram Neelakantan wrote: > > > On Sun, Jun 24 2012,ken wrote: > > > [snipped 37 lines] > > >> 5. Make the elisp documentation and tutorials so easy and fun to learn > >> that tons of people actually want to write code. > > > That'll be the day!(Continue reading)> > > sivaram > > Sivaram, > > People familiar with C say it's a difficult language. But I guess they > never tried it. You can pick up a book on it and if you give it a > little bit of time every day, you can learn enough in a week to write > interesting and working programs. And it's fun. Shell programming like > bash and ksh are easy and fun too. C++ too, but to a lesser degree. > But elisp.... I tried repeatedly over more than ten years to learn it, > bought and read a couple books on it, did some tutorials, of course > spent a lot of time in the docs, but it wasn't until just a few years > ago (and with a lot of help from this list) that I was able to write my > first elisp program. I started a second one last year and I'm still > plodding really slow through it (but not often). It takes so long to > get things to work that I'm discouraged from spending time on it. Half > the time I'm trying to figure out the code and moan to myself that, if I > could write this function in C, I would have had it written in one-tenth
>
> > sivaram
>
> Sivaram,
>
> People familiar with C say it's a difficult language. But I guess they
> never tried it. You can pick up a book on it and if you give it a
> little bit of time every day, you can learn enough in a week to write
> interesting and working programs. And it's fun. Shell programming like
> bash and ksh are easy and fun too. C++ too, but to a lesser degree.
> But elisp.... I tried repeatedly over more than ten years to learn it,
> bought and read a couple books on it, did some tutorials, of course
> spent a lot of time in the docs, but it wasn't until just a few years
> ago (and with a lot of help from this list) that I was able to write my
> first elisp program. I started a second one last year and I'm still
> plodding really slow through it (but not often). It takes so long to
> get things to work that I'm discouraged from spending time on it. Half
> the time I'm trying to figure out the code and moan to myself that, if I
> could write this function in C, I would have had it written in one-tenth
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