• @noli@programming.dev
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      61 year ago

      Dogmatic statements like this lead to bad, messy code. I’m a firm believer that you should use whatever style fits the problem most.

      Although I agree most code would be better if people followed this dogma, sometimes mutability is just more clean/idiomatic/efficient/…

      • @Corbin@programming.dev
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        -11 year ago

        Define your terms before relying on platitudes. Mutability isn’t cleaner if we want composition, particularly in the face of concurrency. Being idiomatic isn’t good or bad, but patterned; not all patterns are universally desirable. The only one which stands up to scrutiny is efficiency, which leads to the cult of performance-at-all-costs if one is not thoughtful.

    • @RageAgainstTheRich@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That is a… strange take.

      Random example, imagine a variable that holds the time of the last time the user moved the mouse. Or in a game holding the current selected target of the player. Or the players gold amount. Or its level. Or health. Or current position.