Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!mips!cs.uoregon.edu!ogicse!intelhf!ichips!inews!hopi!bhoughto From: bhoughto@hopi.intel.com (Blair P. Houghton) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: SNR (was: declaring defines) Message-ID: <4793@inews.intel.com> Date: 21 Jun 91 03:49:37 GMT References: <1991Jun17.132947.5296@druid.uucp> <1997@nixsin.UUCP> <2574@gold.gvg.tek.com> Sender: news@inews.intel.com Organization: Intel Corp, Chandler, AZ Lines: 50 In article <2574@gold.gvg.tek.com> shaunc@gold.gvg.tek.com (Shaun Case) writes: >In article <1997@nixsin.UUCP> koerber.sin@sni.de writes: >>Maybe we really need a moderated comp.lang.c.wizards, for those questions that >>really attract the gurus and human lints out there. > >I think that it is high time for such a group. >Moderation is a must; the noise No, all it does is put the burden of culling valuable opinion onto the shoulders of one individual, whose very acceptance of the job would his/her competence into question. Far from increasing bandwidth (REAL bandwidth: the measure of maximum rate of transmission of INFORMATION through a channel) it decreases it, and inserts an evaluative/ administrative/bidirectional-transmission delay into the flow. I've never seen a moderated group that I considered more than a curiosity. If you want moderation, send your ideas to The C Users' Journal (write to: P.J. Plauger, Senior Editor, The C Users Journal, 2601 Iowa St., Lawrence, KS 66046; (913) 841-1631) or The Journal of C Language Translation (Rex Jaeschke, Journal of C Language Translation, 2051 Swan's Neck Way, Reston, VA 22091; (703) 860-0091). CUJ has a mid-to-high-level editorial bent, designed to give valuable information without leaving novice users in the cold, and tends toward PC-style C without leaving mini/mainframe C users uninformed. JOCLT, on the other hand, is a scientific publication dedicated to the advancement of the understanding, development, and implementation of compilers (or, more generally, "translators"), and tends editorially toward reference and investigative articles. Comp.lang.c, on the third (and final) hand, is exactly the place to go to hash out your misunderstandings about your oft-obscured point of view of the gaggle of languages we occasionally categorize as C. Moderating won't help. It'll just increase the length of the "Newsgroups:" line. --Blair "If you want to learn in the way intelligent people have learned to learn, learn to read the net."