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Asking about the designers reasoning all by it-self should be close voted as primarily opinion based, maybe as too broad. The majority of the users here can only guess as only the designer of the language can answer that question. I'm not sure how all those guesses can be considered valuable for anyone. Only if Brendan Eich or Eric Lippert answers it becomes valuable.

But it is easy to get around that opinion based nature by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

And in this case I imagine Eric and Brandon have more substance to give an insightful answer.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation featureDocumentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

Asking about the designers reasoning all by it-self should be close voted as primarily opinion based, maybe as too broad. The majority of the users here can only guess as only the designer of the language can answer that question. I'm not sure how all those guesses can be considered valuable for anyone. Only if Brendan Eich or Eric Lippert answers it becomes valuable.

But it is easy to get around that opinion based nature by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

And in this case I imagine Eric and Brandon have more substance to give an insightful answer.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

Asking about the designers reasoning all by it-self should be close voted as primarily opinion based, maybe as too broad. The majority of the users here can only guess as only the designer of the language can answer that question. I'm not sure how all those guesses can be considered valuable for anyone. Only if Brendan Eich or Eric Lippert answers it becomes valuable.

But it is easy to get around that opinion based nature by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

And in this case I imagine Eric and Brandon have more substance to give an insightful answer.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

slight steered away from POB and for the whole topic being off-topic
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rene
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Asking about the designers reasoning all by it-self wouldshould be close voted as primarily opinion based, maybe as too broad. The majority of the users here can only guess as only the designer of the language can answer that question. I'm not sure how all those guesses can be considered valuable for anyone. Only if Brendan Eich or Eric Lippert answers it becomes valuable.

But it is easy to get around that opinion based nature by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

And in this case I imagine Eric and Brandon have more substance to give an insightful answer.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

Asking about reasoning all by it-self would be close voted as primarily opinion based as only the designer of the language can answer that question.

But it is easy to get around that by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

Asking about the designers reasoning all by it-self should be close voted as primarily opinion based, maybe as too broad. The majority of the users here can only guess as only the designer of the language can answer that question. I'm not sure how all those guesses can be considered valuable for anyone. Only if Brendan Eich or Eric Lippert answers it becomes valuable.

But it is easy to get around that opinion based nature by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

And in this case I imagine Eric and Brandon have more substance to give an insightful answer.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

added 160 characters in body
Source Link
rene
  • 42.3k
  • 55
  • 610
  • 777

Asking about reasoning all by it-self would be close voted as primarily opinion based as only the designer of the language can answer that question.

But it is easy to get around that by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

Asking about reasoning all by it-self would be close voted as primarily opinion based as only the designer of the language can answer that question.

But it is easy to get around that by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

Asking about reasoning all by it-self would be close voted as primarily opinion based as only the designer of the language can answer that question.

But it is easy to get around that by asking about the typical usage of both forms.

I always use Foo.Bar(1) and until version 2.9.13.b this was our only option to Baz the Fu. In recent version we can also do Foo.Bar(true) which still Baz the Fu. I profiled both function for memory and speed. Why does Foo.Bar(1) give me a better performance?

(use any practical applicable example for the actual use of the language construct)

This enables answers to explain the real difference between methods, elaborate about their design and provide a solution to the typical usage of those methods.

Maybe the upcoming Documentation feature is a better place to work-out these kind of topics. An other place might be the wiki, if one exists that is suitable.

Source Link
rene
  • 42.3k
  • 55
  • 610
  • 777
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