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Comment by pseudony

1 year ago

The answer as a whole is serious, I said as much, read again. A singled out this one point, because it is not. It is akin to any other knee-jerk dismissive attitude to anything different. Casting away a far more proven language, used for over a decade in thousands of serious, commercial projects with wide editor (and LSP) support etc over indexing conventions, is not serious.

Lua is my first 1-indexed language, i have yet to have a single bug over this. It's a irrational fear.

Nitpick: you haven’t found any bugs. That doesn’t mean they don’t exist.

  • Yes. So there may be a price to pay, one day.

    But a vague, unsubstantiated feeling that one day, you might introduce a one-off indexing bug should not justify discarding Lua, and all its substantial benefits over project.

    Arguing the pro's of Rust data-structure interop in case of a Rust project - that makes sense. This, this is basically nonsense.

    • > But a vague, unsubstantiated feeling that one day, you might introduce a one-off indexing bug should not justify discarding Lua, and all its substantial benefits over project.

      Nobody said anything like that. There's no vague feeling of indexing bugs; there's a concrete degradation of code quality.

      And yes it's only one factor, not a deal-breaker. Nobody here said it was.

> A singled out this one point, because it is not.

It absolutely is. I gave you concrete reasons. (Edit: actually in a sibling comment)

> i have yet to have a single bug over this.

I never said anything about bugs.