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by weberc2
3505 days ago
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Right, but I think those cases are few and far between. Basically where you need blistering performance and/or deterministic resource usage. I would throw "safety" in there, but many (most?) safety-critical applications are written in C, and Go is certainly safer than C. |
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No, there's a lot more. See my reply to your sibling comment.
> I would throw "safety" in there, but many (most?) safety-critical applications are written in C, and Go is certainly safer than C.
This argument doesn't make any sense to me. Why is being better than a language from 1978 our sole criterion? Shouldn't we try to make our software as reliable as possible?
Besides, Go is not any safer than C when it comes to data races. I care about those a lot too.