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That quote also stuck in my mind. I'm more of a dynamic-language type for most things, and his argument seems to go heavily against dynamic languages. By the way, I'd quote the sentence before as well since it adds important context.

It was a significant improvement that now many a silly mistake did result in an error message instead of in an erroneous answer. (And even this improvement wasn't universally appreciated: some people found error messages they couldn't ignore more annoying than wrong results, and, when judging the relative merits of programming languages, some still seem to equate "the ease of programming" with the ease of making undetected mistakes.)




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