this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2024
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Rust

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 4 months ago

But why can’t we fight to make Rust better and be that “good enough” tool for the next generation of plasma physicists, biotech researchers, and AI engineers?

Because to best realize and appreciate Rust's added value, one has to to be aware, and hindered by, the problems Rust tries to fix.

Because Rust expects good software engineering practices to be put front and center, while in some fields, they are a footnote at best.

Because the idea of a uni-language (uni- anything really) is unattainable, not because the blasé egalitarian "best tool for the job" mantra is true, but because "best tool" from a productive PoV is primarily a question of who's going to use it, not the job itself.

Even if a uni-language was the best at everything, that doesn't mean every person who will theoretically use it will be fit, now or ever, to maximize its potential. If a person is able to do more with an assumed worse tool than he does with a better one, that doesn't necessarily invalidate the assumption, nor is it necessarily the fault of the assumed better tool.

Rust’s success is not a technical feat, but rather a social one

fighting the urge to close tab

Projects like Rust-Analyzer, rustfmt, cargo, miri, rustdoc, mdbook, etc are all social byproduct’s of Rust’s success.

fighting much harder

LogLog’s post makes it clear we need to start pushing the language forward.

One man's pushing the language forward is another man's pushing the language backward.

A quick table of contents

Stopped here after all the marketing talk inserted in the middle.
May come back later.


Side Note: I don't know what part of the webshit stack may have caused this, but selecting text (e.g. by triple-clicking on a paragraph) after the page is loaded for a while is broken for me on Firefox. A lot of errors getting printed in the JS console too. Doesn't happen in a Blink^twice^ browser.