Code’s Worst Enemy
“The second difficulty with the IDE perspective is that Java-style IDEs intrinsically create a circular problem. The circularity stems from the nature of programming languages: the “game piece” shapes are determined by the language’s static type system. Java’s game pieces don’t permit code elimination because Java’s static type system doesn’t have any compression facilities – no macros, no lambdas, no declarative data structures, no templates, nothing that would permit the removal of the copy-and-paste duplication patterns that Java programmers think of as “inevitable boilerplate”, but which are in fact easily factored out in dynamic languages.
Completing the circle, dynamic features make it more difficult for IDEs to work their static code-base-management magic. IDEs don’t work as well with dynamic code features, so IDEs are responsible for encouraging the use of languages that require… IDEs. Ouch.”
http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2007/12/codes-worst-enemy.html
