Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

The real problem is that conjoins two different matters, and while for one of them (data-structures related) the synonymization is perfectly fine, for the other (function-related) it makes no sense whatsoever. This is all language-agnostic still.

The true solution is for to be split into and (that I've created today, incidentally), and only then for to be merged into .

Simply merging into (with the synonymization hack to boot) is insane (/strong language). It also breaks the tag edit interface, as can be seen in my recent questionmy recent question.

The real problem is that conjoins two different matters, and while for one of them (data-structures related) the synonymization is perfectly fine, for the other (function-related) it makes no sense whatsoever. This is all language-agnostic still.

The true solution is for to be split into and (that I've created today, incidentally), and only then for to be merged into .

Simply merging into (with the synonymization hack to boot) is insane (/strong language). It also breaks the tag edit interface, as can be seen in my recent question.

The real problem is that conjoins two different matters, and while for one of them (data-structures related) the synonymization is perfectly fine, for the other (function-related) it makes no sense whatsoever. This is all language-agnostic still.

The true solution is for to be split into and (that I've created today, incidentally), and only then for to be merged into .

Simply merging into (with the synonymization hack to boot) is insane (/strong language). It also breaks the tag edit interface, as can be seen in my recent question.

Source Link
Will Ness
  • 71.1k
  • 1
  • 19
  • 23

The real problem is that conjoins two different matters, and while for one of them (data-structures related) the synonymization is perfectly fine, for the other (function-related) it makes no sense whatsoever. This is all language-agnostic still.

The true solution is for to be split into and (that I've created today, incidentally), and only then for to be merged into .

Simply merging into (with the synonymization hack to boot) is insane (/strong language). It also breaks the tag edit interface, as can be seen in my recent question.