On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 3:06 PM, Christopher Selph cds.wine@gmail.com wrote:
Well, being a garbage collected language, it would help with the memory leaks in Wine. Being OOP it could extend the design of the code to make it cleaner and reusable.
The assertions above are opinions, not facts. Also, it requires a full rewrite.
Wine Initial release(per Wikipedia): 4 July 1993
Good luck.
--Stephen
Sent from my Emacs
On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 20:48, Stephen Eilert spedrosa@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 3:06 PM, Christopher Selph cds.wine@gmail.com wrote:
Well, being a garbage collected language, it would help with the memory leaks in Wine. Being OOP it could extend the design of the code to make it cleaner and reusable.
The assertions above are opinions, not facts. Also, it requires a full rewrite.
You can mix D code and C code...
A more modern language can result in more readable code, but it is a lot of effort for a small benefit... (And D is a very new language, possibly to the degree that portability might be impacted due to a lack of compilers on some of the more obscure platforms / architectures).
Certain parts of Wine might benefit from the latest (draft) version of C++ and the size of the codebase can probably be reduced in size slightly, but a bad port to another language doesn't help anyone... (The C++ standard library is huge and might getrid of some POSIX dependancies) It might require quite an extensive rewrite to get it to a proper C++ program, rather than a C program containing a bit of C++ and compiled with a C++ compiler...
Fixing the current problems with Wine should be a much higher priority than porting it to a different language... Porting a codebase the size of Wine will probably take years... C can do anything that other languages can, the amount of effort might differ a bit, bit the difference is probably minor compared to familiarizing yourself with a new language, new libraries, etc....
(I like D - it have most features from languages like Java and C#, with the option to switch off things like garbage collection and it compiles to native code... Experimenting with it for new project might make sense)
(IMHO: Allowing other languages than C for some of Wine's bundled applications (notepad, winecfg, winemine, etc) might make sense, as long as the QC for committing patches doesn't suffer. The mixing of languages within components (single application / DLL) will probably cause confusion and ugly code though... Getting proper QC would probably mostly involve sticking to things that AJ is familiar with.)
Gert