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by BatmanAoD
1918 days ago
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Nothing in this article seems to be saying that C "isn't useful". It also doesn't state that bounds checks are the "most difficult thing in software development." As the article mentions, C is 50 years old. The fact that it's still used is evidence of its usefulness, sure. It has outlasted almost all of its peers. Rust has been stable for under 6 years. In that time, it's been adopted by a slew of major companies, and people have used their free time to write some extremely good software in it. So by that metric, Rust's usefulness speaks for itself, too. |
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- Regardless it is true or not, this seldom works in long term. I just simply point this observation out.
In fact language as tool is never about more features, it is about minimum features for maximize utilities, and Rust is already on the domain of "feature-rich" language.