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by 9rx
264 days ago
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Let me help you narrow in on the only bit where your comment can find relevance: > And in practice Go and Rust have found use in a lot of the exact same systems programming and network programming domains, as replacement languages for C. To which was already followed up with: > the data is abundantly clear that Go was most adopted by those who were previously using Ruby and Python. Nice of you to say the exact same thing again, I guess, but it would be more effective if it were correctly positioned in the thread. I know, it can be difficult to track down the right correct reply button. Especially when in a rush to post something that just repeats what is already there. |
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