- cross-posted to:
- rust@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- rust@lemmit.online
Oh no, not another ‘Is Rust better than Go?’ article. Seriously, haven’t we all had our fill of these comparisons by now? But before you sigh in exasperation, hear us out!
Oh no, not another ‘Is Rust better than Go?’ article. Seriously, haven’t we all had our fill of these comparisons by now? But before you sigh in exasperation, hear us out!
This is just…not actually true, depending on what you mean by “obsolete”. Rust has been stable since 2015; almost all code written for version 1.0 still compiles today.
This is more subjective, but most of the current feature-stabilization work in Rust is not “bolting on” completely new functionality, but rather focused on reducing places in the language where different features are currently incompatible. This blog post is a bit old, but expresses what I mean: https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2022/09/22/rust-2024-the-year-of-everywhere/