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by typesanitizer
1509 days ago
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> There's no perfect language, yet people are always trying to find one. It's OK if you don't like Go and prefer another language, the real devil / tradeoff is in the fact that conformance to a single language (or set of languages) is such a strong social phenomena. I think that's why people end up so angry with viewed-as-subpar languages like Go gaining so much traction I hope my post didn't come across this way. To be clear, I think Rust and Swift (as two examples that I mention multiple times) have a lot of problems (slow compilation being a very big one), and are by no means perfect. I'm not angry at Go's popularity as much as wanting improvements to the developer experience. |
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