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by jltsiren
786 days ago
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No language from Apple / Google / Microsoft / whatever can ever be a serious replacement for C++. When the development of the language is dominated by a single entity, the risk that the interests of that entity override those of other users is simply too high. Vendor-specific languages are fine, if you are developing something for that vendor's ecosystem. But if you don't want to lock your code to a specific ecosystem, an independent language such as C++ or Rust is a better choice. |
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Same applies to C, stuff like C23 is decided by who gets to join WG14.
In both cases, someone has to buy the final standard from ISO.