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by pstuart
940 days ago
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And yet it's a productive language with significant adoption, go figure. They made trade-offs and are conservative about refining the language; that cuts both ways but works well for a lot of people. The Go team does seem to care about improving it and for many that use it, it keeps getting better. Perhaps it doesn't happen at the pace people want but they always have other options. |
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Perl was also a successful language with significant adoption. At least back then, we didn’t know any better.
In twenty years the industry will look back on golang as an avoidable mistake that hampered software development from maturing into an actual engineering discipline, for the false economy of making novice programmers quickly productive. I’m willing to put money on that belief, given sufficiently agreed upon definitions.