top | item 14657665

(no title)

notalaser | 8 years ago

But it's not "just" limited tools and a need to train developers. A language having a small community results in a lack of library and collaboration; you end up dealing with tool vendors who barely manage to keep themselves afloat, let alone invest in development, with long unmaintained libraries, with months, sometimes years passing between when a new architecture or OS is available and when the compiler and the libraries you use get updated.

It's not too different from how things are in Common Lisp land, a language (and a land...) that I'm pretty familiar with. It's a great, probably the best language. There are a few success stories, but truth is, in 2017, most large-scale, non-hobby projects are failures.

discuss

order

No comments yet.