Because of the Turing completeness theory, everything one Turing-complete language can do can theoretically be done by another Turing-complete language, but at a different cost. You can do everything in assembler, but no one wants to program in assembler anymore.
More Quotes from Yukihiro Matsumoto:
Ruby inherited the Perl philosophy of having more than one way to do the same thing. I inherited that philosophy from Larry Wall, who is my hero actually. I want to make Ruby users free. I want to give them the freedom to choose.Yukihiro Matsumoto
That's Ruby's main difference from other language designs. I emphasize the feeling, in particular, how I feel using Ruby.
Yukihiro Matsumoto
I want to solve problems I meet in the daily life by using computers, so I need to write programs. By using Ruby, I want to concentrate the things I do, not the magical rules of the language, like starting with public void something something something to say, print hello world. I just want to say, print this I don't want all the surrounding magic keywords.
Yukihiro Matsumoto
Sometimes people jot down pseudo-code on paper. If that pseudo-code runs directly on their computers, it's best, isn't it Ruby tries to be like that, like pseudo-code that runs. Python people say that too.
Yukihiro Matsumoto
In our daily lives as programmers, we process text strings a lot. So I tried to work hard on text processing, namely the string class and regular expressions. Regular expressions are built into the language and are very tuned up for use.
Yukihiro Matsumoto
Actually, I didn't make the claim that Ruby follows the principle of least surprise. Someone felt the design of Ruby follows that philosophy, so they started saying that. I didn't bring that up, actually.
Yukihiro Matsumoto
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Based on Topics: Language QuotesBased on Keywords: assembler, completeness, theoretically, turing
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