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Comment by AceJohnny2

1 day ago

... yes?

>> Yes, you can use it everywhere. Is that what you consider a success?

> ... yes?

Then perhaps you and I define success differently? As I've said in other comments above, C persisting or really standing still is not what I would think of as a winning and vibrant community. And the moving embedded and kernel development from what was previously a monoculture to something more diverse could be a big win for developers. My hope is that competition from Rust makes using C better/easier/more productive, but I have my doubts as to whether it will move C to make changes.

  • Sometimes it's nice to know that something will run and compile reliably far into the future. That's a nice thing to have, and wide support for the language and its relatively unchanging nature make it reliable.