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authorPjotr Prins2025-11-20 11:05:57 +0100
committerPjotr Prins2025-11-20 11:05:57 +0100
commit7f1be7fc3cf51cc7c3b37b88b808c44f2fbf1add (patch)
treed85404f454a2af9eb5cb907881da245ea77a7371 /doc/code
parent3165580c4038cbf6bcd5798bbf541557581430e2 (diff)
downloadpangemma-7f1be7fc3cf51cc7c3b37b88b808c44f2fbf1add.tar.gz
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-rw-r--r--doc/code/pangemma.md4
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diff --git a/doc/code/pangemma.md b/doc/code/pangemma.md
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@@ -189,7 +189,9 @@ we are talking message passing!
 
 OK, I have a confession to make. Reading Lisp code does not come that natural to me. I find writing Lisp easier than reading Lisp(!) Maybe it is because I have been reading Algol-type languages all my life, or maybe because Ruby is just a better fit to my brain. Where Lisp is definitely the greater language, I just find it harder to parse. Even my own code! I met Matz once and he told me that Ruby was known as Matz's own Lisp. So, there we are. I need the Ruby syntax oddities as little helpers to make my brain disentangle code.
 
-Ruby's REPL, however, is not that useful.
+## And again: why guile and not Ruby?
+
+Ruby's REPL is -- unfortunately -- not that useful.
 
 ## The art of message passing