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I do not understand your answer when I can see a lot of energy focused on integrating LUA with C/C++ back and forth.
 

I'm an Electrical Engineer and I strongly disagree with your point of view of an engineer having problems understanding 0 based arrays…

When an Engineer is not a programmer you have to get him trained on programming techniques, and not the other way around.

0 based arrays have a strong logic; it definitely pays off understanding/using that logic.

 
 
I think the potential of LUA today goes probably far beyond the initial target, I think addressing these issues will definatelly made of LUA an amazing option.
 
Best,
Pat

--- On Mon, 6/18/12, steve donovan <steve.j.donovan@gmail.com> wrote:

From: steve donovan <steve.j.donovan@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: LUA oddities..
To: "Lua mailing list" <lua-l@lists.lua.org>
Date: Monday, June 18, 2012, 2:29 AM

On Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 11:21 AM, Patrick Masotta <masottaus@yahoo.com> wrote:
> 3) Why there’s not a switch statement?

The answer to these questions is basically "Lua is not C, and it is
_definitely_ not Python"

It was originally designed to interface to engineers who were more
familiar with Fortran. These days, many engineers I come across are
more used to VBS (_so_ much gets done in Excel) and they have
difficulty reading zero-based arrays and curly braces.  They may not
be programming experts, but they are certainly not kids - just come
from a different background.

There are Lua-derivatives that use the traditional curly braces, e.g.
Squirrel.

steve d.

PS it's Lua, not LUA: it is a word meaniing 'Moon', not an acronym.