She's as sweet as Tupelo Honey She's an angel of the highest degree.... -- Van Morrison SyntacticTupeloHoney is like SyntacticSugar, but way more expensive. So much so in that it represents a great deal of pain (loss of performance, etc.) for modest gains in programmer productivity, for "minor" features, and/or for orthogonality for orthogonality's sake. Whereas SyntacticSugar can be a good thing, SyntacticTupeloHoney is often an AntiPattern. [Example, please? This sounds trollish] ''For some domains, code execution is not the bottleneck. Most performance problems I see are caused by bad design, not the language interpreter being too slow.''