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by gemstones
1216 days ago
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While I like Clojure as a language - I have never seen a language that engendered such hatred in PMs, EMs, sales, etc. I don't know that it survives long term (in industry, it'll survive for a long time as a hobby language.) |
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It's also clear (see Hickey talk Effective Programs, 10 Years of Clojure, where he surveys the room) that Clojure programmers tend to be senior (real senior not 5 years experience "senior") and a little grumpy about the state of the art, opinionated, and don't want to be cogs. This may also explain the allergic reaction among people who manage programmers/engineers. Managers as a rule (especially at certain orgs) tend to want people who are more compliant and less free thinking and likely to push back.
Anyway I think you make a good point except I disagree about its survival long term. I think there's something to be said about the value of being more popular among older more seasoned programmers vs PMs. How many PMs in the 90s foresaw the rise of Linux (vs proprietary unix and Windows), how many go overboard on "agile", how many were into ruby on rails before it picked up among programmers, etc. Managers tend to be a lagging indicator (speaking very broadly).