Excerpts from John List's message of 2010-09-25 22:37:58 +0200: > On 09/25/2010 02:21 PM, Joel Roth wrote: > > ... > > > > I thought I would like to learn some other language, either > > python, ruby, Tcl or Forth, but usually I have some > > practical problem to get done, and the more familiar > > language gets used. > > > I'm in the same situation. I've boiled it down to choosing between learning Python or learning Ruby. > > So ... we've been talking about Perl and Python. Does anyone have any observations on how Ruby fits (or doesn't) into this picture? > -Can it be used for scripting (the original subject)? > -Is it as C-compatible as Python? > > Thanks, > > John Hi John, just to mention another language, even less known than ruby: Lua I've only dabbled in a couple of languages, and so far I like Lua best, it's simply fun to write, simple stuff is simple to do, for hard stuff there are usually libraries to help you. It's a small language and you build stuff with only a few language features, which is the beauty of it, imho. It was designed to be embedded in C programs to script those and as a configuration language, its C interface is said to be better than pythons. You can use it on its own as well, but for simple scripts bash likely has its benefits (over probably every other language). Same as Joel uses Perl, I use Lua to develop an ecasound frontend (but it's not generally useful yet). Regards, Philipp _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user