Saturday, September 8, 2012

How old men retweet

Programs must be written for people to read, and only incidentally for machines to execute.

-Sussman

A computer is like a violin. You can imagine a novice trying first a phonograph and then a violin. The latter, he says, sounds terrible. That is the argument we have heard from our humanists and most of our computer scientists. Computer programs are good, they say, for particular purposes, but they aren't flexible. Neither is a violin, or a typewriter, until you learn how to use it.

Marvin Minsky,
Why Programming Is a Good Medium for Expressing Poorly-Understood and Sloppily-Formulated Ideas

From:

Donald E. Knuth, Fundamental Algorithms (Volume 1 of The Art of Computer Programming)

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