Hello,
Just some comments from me.
Dont know it! Do’ve a link please?
‘Computerwoche’? Never heard of How does it compare to c’t and ix
(that those people should be reading)?
I’ve been programming in diffirent languages: Delphi, C++, Java, VB, C#,
Python/Jyhon, Perl, Rebol, Rexx & Ruby. I find apps written in Ruby easy to
maintain and after writting something I can put it on a server and forget
about it! (isnt the same with our C++ apps!!)
- How much manpower is needed to maintain software (usually a very
time-consuming task)?
Ruby is just like Java- a free programming language (1 no cost to buy
development tools etc)
I dont know if one get any Ruby books (I’ve been working in Ruby for 6
months & taught myself) Even for someone that doesnt have any programming
exprience it would be easy to crasp Ruby.
- Costs of introducing Ruby - in terms of training, not of
hard/software. Oops, big trap: Are there any professional Ruby
courses and if they exist: is an in-house option available?
? You might need to look at the licencing of the software.
- Can using Ruby mean running into trouble when exporting software to
China or Korea (due to some historical facts concerning Japan and
these countries)? - I don’t like asking that question but from a
business point of view it has to be asked
-
Is it possible to create distributable binaries that don’t require
a Ruby installation? -
Is it possible to obfuscate code so that it is no longer readable
(that question did come up elsewhere when C# was fresh and someone
wrote a tool that created quite readable C# code from CLI
instructions). -
How to deal with the choice between two licenses?
-
How portable are Programs written in Ruby?
-
How does Ruby compare to Perl and Python in terms of availability
of libraries available books, other documentation and libraries? -
Why switch from a compiled language to an interpreted language?
Just my 0.02 EUR,
Josef ‘Jupp’ Schugt
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