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Java 7: What's In It For Developers

GMGruman writes "After five years of a torturous political process and now under the new ownership of Oracle, Java SE 7 is finally out (and its initial bugs patched in the Update 1 release). So what does it actually offer? Paul Krill surveys the new capabilities that matter most for Java developers, from dynamic language support to an improved file system."

3 of 338 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Kill it Oracle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ah yes. The old "blame the language for the lack of a developer's skills" ploy. It's a sad carpenter who blames his tools for his incompetence. It's a sadder carpenter who blames a tool for other carpenters' incompetence.

    Just curious: what do you think all those "Java weenies who couldn't code themselves out of a paper sack" would do if Java died. Would they magically become skilled code gurus because Java doesn't exist? Or would they be incompetent coders in a different language?

    As Dilbert so succinctly put it: you're solving the wrong problem!

  2. Re:One day we will be done with java... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While you are busy being a jackass and letting us all know you have never made a single mistake EVER with resource allocation, some of us have work to do and enjoy the fact that we will never have to type try{openFile}catch(DamnException){}finally{try{closeFile}catch(AotherDamnException){}} ever again.

  3. Re:Devs can now be more lazy by ApplicativeJones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes. Let's shun all advances in programming language design, because they make it too hard to use languages without them.

    Man, imagine what'd happen if you ever ran into a programming language with a good design. There are some out there that are actually pretty good. Of course, no language is perfect - or even close. But people who resist making things better just because it makes defects in existing languages more obvious is doing themselves, and the entire field of software engineering, a disservice.