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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Programming languages polyglots: how many languages you know? Post 302225311 by era on Friday 15th of August 2008 05:47:21 AM
Old 08-15-2008
For my work I need shell / Makefiles, Perl, and regular expressions in particular. Python would be good to know too, but I know Perl well enough that I never really had the incentive to learn yet another language, although I'm planning to fix that. Other than that, I stopped hoarding new languages after I noticed how I was able to get work done in Perl (and finally stopped believing you have to work in a compiled language in order to be taken seriously).

Back at University, I got good marks when I took C, Prolog, and Lisp courses -- oh, and Pascal of course, back then -- , but I could hardly impress anyone with my practical skills in those languages. Emacs Lisp is an environment I enjoy tremendously when I get to dabble with it.

Basic reading comprehension skills in C and C++ never hurt, but I would not know where to start solving a real-world problem, and would be extremely frustrated about the lack of expressive power and standard facilities. I guess a good palette of libraries would ameliorate that a lot, but I don't know any such libraries, and the few I've looked at left a lot to wish for. Ditto in spades for assembly, of course.

Never really seriously tried to tackle Java; somehow I get the impression that people who work in that language are not happy, even though the high amount of reusable libraries looks attractive from a distance.
 

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Preferred(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    Preferred(3pm)

NAME
Lingua::Preferred - Perl extension to choose a language SYNOPSIS
use Lingua::Preferred qw(which_lang acceptable_lang); my @wanted = qw(en de fr it de_CH); my @available = qw(fr it de); my $which = which_lang(@wanted, @available); print "language $which is the best of those available "; foreach (qw(en_US fr nl de_DE)) { print "language $_ is acceptable " if acceptable_lang(@wanted, $_); } DESCRIPTION
Often human-readable information is available in more than one language. Which should you use? This module provides a way for the user to specify possible languages in order of preference, and then to pick the best language of those available. Different 'dialects' given by the 'territory' part of the language specifier (such as en, en_GB, and en_US) are also supported. The routine "which_lang()" picks the best language from a list of alternatives. The arguments are: o a reference to a list of preferred languages (first is best). Here, a language is a string like 'en' or 'fr_CA'. ('fr_*' can also be given - see below.) 'C' (named for the Unix 'C' locale) matches any language. o a reference to non-empty list of available languages. Here, a language can be like 'en', 'en_CA', or "undef" meaning 'unknown'. The return code is which language to use. This will always be an element of the available languages list. The cleverness of this module (if you can call it that) comes from inferring implicit language preferences based on the explicit list passed in. For example, if you say that en is acceptable, then en_IE and en_DK will presumably be acceptable too (but not as good as just plain en). If you give your language as en_US, then en is almost as good, with the other dialects of en following soon afterwards. If there is a tie between two choices, as when two dialects of the same language are available and neither is explicitly preferred, or when none of the available languages appears in the user's list, then the choice appearing earlier in the available list is preferred. Sometimes, the automatic inferring of related dialects is not what you want, because a language dialect may be very different to the 'main' language, for example Swiss German or some forms of English. For this case, the special form 'XX_*' is available. If you dislike Mexican Spanish (as a completely arbitrary example), then "[ 'es', 'es_*', 'es_MX' ]" would rank this dialect below any other dialect of es (but still acceptable). You don't have to explicitly list every other dialect of Spanish before es_MX. So for example, supposing @avail contains the languages available: o You know English and prefer US English: $which = which_lang([ 'en_US' ], @avail); o You know English and German, German/Germany is preferred: $which = which_lang([ 'en', 'de_DE' ], @avail); o You know English and German, but preferably not Swiss German: $which = which_lang([ 'en', 'de', 'de_*', 'de_CH' ], @avail); Here any dialect of German (eg de_DE, de_AT) is preferable to de_CH. Whereas "which_lang()" picks the best language from a list of alternatives, "acceptable_lang()" answers whether a single language is included (explicitly or implicitly) in the list of wanted languages. It adds the implicit dialects in the same way. AUTHOR
Ed Avis, ed@membled.com SEE ALSO
perl(1). perl v5.8.8 2005-10-17 Preferred(3pm)
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