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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/10/2011 in all areas

  1. Thanks for that positive story. Actually it is hard to believe the attitude of text-based programmers looking at a graphical code as a kind of 'toy'. I work in a very thight interdisciplinary team. When we talk about electronics, we look at the schematics and not at text. If we need a mechanical construction, we also look at drawings. And whenever we do design some optics, we have beams, surfaces and lenses drawn. And when something is measured/characterized, it's also graphically plotted. So really weired to do text-based software. Here I would disagree. There is a very important difference between data-flow languages and all other languages. At first, this is a bit hidden in the compiler (there are some good explanations in wikipedia, and of course some pretty detailed issues posted mainly by AQ): In a text based language I can write i=i+1 where the data before and after this operation is stored at the same memory location. In LV you can't. Each wire (upstream and downstream of the +1 prim) is pointing to a unique memory location. This data flow paradigm has sever consquences: Parallelism is nativ We have a duality of by-val (native) and by-ref, while text based compilers are limited to pointer :throwpc:/by-ref. Felix
    1 point
  2. Just right click and select "generate code". Nothing clever. Even I can do it
    1 point
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