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On 13/01/2025 09:58, David Brown wrote:There are a few trollish characters in this newsgroup, but I don't believe I have seen any in this thread. There are several people who have made suggestions that don't match your opinions - that does not make them "trolls", and it most certainly does not make them dishonest. Such wild accusations will make you unpopular here, and greatly reduce the chances of you getting helpful answers to your questions.On 13/01/2025 04:10, James Kuyper wrote:On 1/9/25 21:51, Julio Di Egidio wrote:You can of course also argue that it is best to have the code ordered according to the normal flow of operations - error handling in the middle of the normal code flow can make it hard to follow the algorithm of a function. (C++ exceptions are an extreme version of this.) Some people might prefer a compromise:Some people are just wrong and not even honest at that.
**Please don't mind and don't feed the trolls**:
I had the misfortune of calling out the utter and ugly bullshit from these characters in the past in other groups: this gang of nazi-retarded and mostly academic spammers and polluters of all ponds just hates my guts since then.Perhaps you have mixed up threads in different newsgroups? That is not a characterisation that matches anyone who posts regularly here. Yes, there are a few people that seem to live in ivory towers, and a few who occasionally appear to gain pleasure from annoying everyone else, and some who post things that are barely comprehensible. But those are a minority of posts, they have not been significant in this thread, and even at their worst they do not warrant the kind of abusive characterisation you are giving them here.
BTW, on that C++ vs C issue (you know who you are), I respect that but I'd say it's wrong: C and C++ share nothing but some syntax, and one is high-level, not the other...While there is one person who posts primarily about C++ in this C group, and that can be annoying, it is not unreasonable to make occasional references or comparisons to C++ precisely because they are strongly related languages that share a great deal of overlap. Many C programmers are familiar with C++ - most C++ programmers are familiar with C. There are a lot of us that use both languages. They /are/ different languages, with different strengths and weaknesses, but to suggest they share nothing but some syntax shows that you have little understanding of at least one of the languages.
Thanks again and please use a kill-file: I do.I suspect that with your post here, you risk ending up on more than a few kill files.
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