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by lelanthran
236 days ago
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> Because you’re young or you weren't around in 2010 when Go was gaining adoption. I've been working as a programmer since the mid-90s >> I'm battling to think of any other about-to-go-mainstream language that had the reputation of a hostile community. > People said “I like the language, it’s quite useful” followed by tirades from people who thought it was the end of human civilisation. And? That's not the same as having a hostile community. I never saw Go proponents enter C# or Java discussions to make attacks against the programmers using C# or Java like I saw constantly wirh Rust proponents entering C or C++ discussions and calling the developers dinosaurs, incompetent, etc. |
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Hostile according to who? According to the haters, maybe. I’m sure the Go community was called “hostile” by haters back in the day.
Look at the drama created by Linux maintainers who were being insanely hostile, coming up with spurious objections, being absolute asshats - to the point where even Linus said enough was enough. The Rust for Linux members conducted themselves with dignity throughout. The Linux subsystem maintainers acted like kindergarteners.
But of course, haters will read the same emails and confirmation bias will tell them they’re right and Rust is the problem.
Keep hating.