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by CharlieDigital
69 days ago
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I can see where he's coming from. For example, `dynamic` was initially introduced to support COM interop when Office add-in functionality was introduced. Should I use it in my web API? I can, but I probably shouldn't. `.ConfigureAwait(bool)` is another where it is relevant, but only in some contexts. This is precisely because the language itself operates in many runtime scenarios. |
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But I'm not sure that's really a problem. Does the OP expect everyone to use an entirely different languages every single context? I have web applications and desktop applications that interact with Office that share common code.
Even `dynamic` is pretty nice as far as weird dynamic language features are concerned.
Interestingly enough `.ConfigureAwait(bool)` is entirely the opposite of `dynamic` -- it's not a language feature at all but instead a library call. I could argue that might instead be better as a keyword.