Re: Strategic Functional Migration and Multiple Inheritance



I would be interested in knowing how you came to the numbers that you
have in points 1 and 2.

While I agree that implementation inheritance would be useful, if the
numbers that you claim are anywhere near correct, you have already answered
why MI is not supported in modern languages (meaning most .NET languages,
Java).

In all of this, I didn't see a recommendation on how such functionality
might be included in C# (proposed language syntax, rules, etc, etc). Why
not show something of that nature?


--
- Nicholas Paldino [.NET/C# MVP]
- mvp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

"Shawnk" <Shawnk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:37B632C2-66E7-433A-A449-27FA734BB33D@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Some Sr. colleges and I have had an on going discussion relative to when
and
if
C# will ever support 'true' multiple inheritance.

Relevant to this, I wanted to query the C# community (the 'target'
programming
community herein) to get some community input and verify (or not) the
following
two statements.

[1] Few programmers (3 to7%) UNDERSTAND 'Strategic Functional Migration
(SFM)' (see PS below).

[2] Of those few, even less (another 3 to 7%) are GOOD at Strategic
Functional Migration (or 0.9% to 0.49%).

Do these percentages seem about right? (less than 1% of the target
programming
community are GOOD at SFM)

Thanks ahead of time for any relevant QUALITY input.

Shawnk

PS.

Strategic Functional Migration (SFM) is described in the post following
this
one.

PPS. I submit to my fellow colleges that the answer (point spread)
determines

[A] Short term mitosis of the few to pioneer a new language incorporating
C#
productivity with C++ (SFM) powers

[B] Long term community evolution and industry migration away from C# as a
'core competency' solution (subtle point)

Both A/B, in turn, instantiate the 'early adopter' model in the compiler
market.

PPPS.

I have a 'core competency' project I want to do that would be a lot easier
if I
could use SFM with C#.


.



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