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LocalMan | 6 years ago

Programming languages are like culture. If you're embedded in one then moving to another sometimes seems like a maze of funhouse mirrors.

I once had the misfortune of changing from an Algol environment to a Cobol environment. After a year I'd gotten over my revulsion and became fluent and productive in Cobol.

It's like saying English has lots of irrationalities to it, which is true. But if it's your mother tongue and you're fluent that doesn't matter.

Go is not impaired. Go involves a set of sophisticated choices for software engineering, not for computer science research. If you're going to have many millions of lines of code and some shifting around in your staff, you don't want tricky code that takes a long time to figure out, or that obscures functionality, or that obscures bugs.

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