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by dion.
Original Post: Continous Tax?
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Cedric and Bob are talking about the Continous Tax that you have to pay when you use dynamic languages.
Really? I have developed fairly large codebases in dynamic and static languages, and I never found this the case. In fact, if I had to make a gross generalization I would have to say:
The dynamic language projects had less code, and it was easier for the team to maintain
The dynamic language projects had small teams, so it was easier for us to maintain (we could do more with less)
The Java projects were often over engineered (not a problem with Java per se, but epidemic to a large part of the community)
Of course, I have seen projects in both worlds that had to pay a lot of continuous tax. This was normally due to bad design, a poor choice of tools, a poor choice of developers, and a myriad of other reasons that had NOTHING to do with static vs. dynamic.
Quite frankly, at this stage of the game all I care about is having a small team of developers that I respect and enjoy working with.