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  • To: XML Developers List <xml-dev@l...>
  • Subject: Re: Using The Principle of Least Power As A Razor
  • From: Rick Jelliffe <rjelliffe@a...>
  • Date: Thu, 16 Feb 2006 16:11:30 +1100
  • In-reply-to: <43F3FC2E.4080407@z...>
  • References: <15725CF6AFE2F34DB8A5B4770B7334EE0BB1FDC5@h...> <43F3FC2E.4080407@z...>
  • User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 0.6 (X11/20040502)

Narrator: And then there were my father and mother. Two people who could 
find an argument in any subject.
Father: Wait a minute. Are you telling me you think the Atlantic is a 
greater ocean than the Pacific?
Mother: No, have it your way. The Pacific is greater.
Narrator: I mean, how many people fight over oceans?

    http://torp.priv.no/woody/films/radio.html

Cheers
Rick

> Bullard, Claude L (Len) wrote:
>
>> When selecting a language, how does one know when it has the 'least 
>> power'?
>>
>> o  Is Assembler less or more powerful than C?
>>
>> o  Is C less or more powerful than C++?
>>
>> o  Is Lisp less or more powerful than Prolog?
>>
>> o  Is RDF less or more powerful than Conceptual Graphs?
>>
>> o  Are Conceptual Graphs more or less powerful than Topic Maps?
>>
>> o  Are DTDs less or more powerful than Schematron?
>>
>> A principle or axiom is of no value without the rules for applying it.
>> len
>


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