|
|
|
|
|
by testdelacc1
236 days ago
|
|
Acolytes being the people talking positively about their experience using a language and the strengths they think it has. So the people with positive opinions should say nothing at all, and the people with negative opinions should be free to share. And somehow, you think this will lead to faster adoption. That’s an interesting thought. It would run counter to everything we know about human nature, but interesting nevertheless. Rust is already pretty successful adoption wise. It’s powering significant parts of the internet, it’s been introduced in 3 major operating systems (Windows, Linux, Android), many successful companies in a variety of domains have written their entire tech stack in it. Adoption as measured by crates.io downloads has doubled every year for the last 10 years. Now I’m imagining how much more widely Rust would be used if they had adopted your visionary approach of never saying anything positive about it. |
|
No, it's the people who have given rise to the multiple Rust memes over the years.
I'm battling to think of any other about-to-go-mainstream language that had the reputation of a hostile community. Scala? Kotlin? Swift? Zig? None of those languages have built such poor reputations for their communities.
After all, for quite a few years every thread on forums that mentioned C or C++ was derailed by Rust proponents. I didn't see C++ users jumping into Rust threads posting attacks, but there are many examples of Rust users jumping into C++ or C threads, posting attacks.
> That’s an interesting thought. It would run counter to everything we know about human nature, but interesting nevertheless.
Well, the fact that Rust is an outlier in this sample should tell you everything you need to know; other up-and-coming languages have not, in the past, gotten such a reputation.