"When the coder discussion board Stack Overflow conducts its annual poll of developers around the world, Rust has been rated the most “loved” programming language for seven years running."
> What will it be then, "those 50% of the world who use Rust are not real programmers"?
So many of them will be needed to make rust code compile with the latest compiler version and the latest standard library ? Or porting code they wrote 2 months before to the new compiler ? /s
I would liken Rust to Justin Bieber: I really don't care for it (I'll take Lisp/Kreator), but there are a great many people who love it. De gustibus non est disputandum, as they say.
One thing that draw me to Rust was the ecosystem and community. I think the team has made a great effort to create good learning resources and people are happy to help.
Admittedly they are not very focused on absolute beginners but that is understandable and makes finding decent resources easier.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 43.0 ms ] thread"When the coder discussion board Stack Overflow conducts its annual poll of developers around the world, Rust has been rated the most “loved” programming language for seven years running."
Also, the French intelligence agency GCHQ has an entire mini book on how to write safe code with Rust btw.
https://www.ssi.gouv.fr/en/actualite/be-part-of-anssis-new-g...
What will it be then, "those 50% of the world who use Rust are not real programmers"? Or "the agencies and the governments got duped by zealots"?
I am curious what will be the future narrative. Care to give some hints?
So many of them will be needed to make rust code compile with the latest compiler version and the latest standard library ? Or porting code they wrote 2 months before to the new compiler ? /s
Admittedly they are not very focused on absolute beginners but that is understandable and makes finding decent resources easier.