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by danudey
243 days ago
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The objections I see against Rust and Rust rewrites of things remind me a lot of the objections I saw against Linux and Linux users by Windows users, and against macOS and macOS users by Linux users. Dismissive language and denegrating comments without any technical backing; assertions of self-superiority. "It's a toy", "it's not mature", "it's a worse version of blah blah", "my thing does stuff it doesn't do and that's important, but it does things my thing doesn't do and that's irrelevant". Honestly it's at the point where I see someone complaining about a Rust rewrite and I just go ahead and assume that they're mouthing off about something because they think it's trendy and they think it's cool to hate things people like. I hate being prejudicial about comments but I don't have the energy to spend trying to figure out if someone is debating in good faith or not when it seems to so rarely be the case. |
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It's really weird, at one point I started asking myself if many comments are just hidden from me.
Then I just shrugged it off and concluded that it's plain old human bias and "mine is good, yours is bad" tribe mentality and figured it's indeed not worth my time and energy to do further analysis on tribal instinctive behaviour that's been well-explained in literature for like a century at this point.
I have no super strong feelings for or against Rust, by the way. I have used it to crushing success exactly where it shines and for that it got my approval. But I also work a lot with Elixir and I would rarely try to make a web app with Rust; multiple PLs have the frameworks that make this much better and faster and more pleasant to do.
But it does make me wonder: what stake do these people have in the whole thing? Why do they keep mouthing off about some imaginary zealots that are nowhere to be found?