How to explain an analog state variable filter ..

James Coplin EMAIL HIDDEN
Fri Oct 14 19:42:49 CEST 2011


My point was twofold.  First, quibbling over languages that really are a
matter of choice more than anything else is pretty pointless.  There
certainly are specific applications where particular apps have an edge in
terms of ease of development etc.  However, that typically is more a
result of libraries than the core language.  The second point was that
these types of arguments I find hysterical as an old grumpy former coder.
The kids these days have it so good it's mind boggling to us old timers.
The choices available and the cool things routinely made were only
considered in our wildest dreams when I started coding.  I recently got
into Arduino coding.  I was floored how simple it was compared to the
embedded stuff I had done and hated back in the day.  I basically made a
module for my modular from idea to development and completion in like 16
hours.  I think the kids will be alright.

James R. Coplin

-----Original Message-----
From: music-bar-bounces at lists.music-bar.org
[mailto:music-bar-bounces at lists.music-bar.org] On Behalf Of Martin Naef
Sent: Friday, October 14, 2011 12:24 PM
To: Music-bar
Subject: Re: How to explain an analog state variable filter ..

On 14.10.2011 6:03, James Coplin wrote:
> The simple fact that you can write a java compiler in c and a c
> compiler in java means they are necessarily computationally
> equivalent.

Well, with that argumentation you can essentially say that all you need is
a Touring machine. Whether that's of any use in practice is another
matter...

Martin

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