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altun

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Why people in Google hate Go?

28 points·by altun·3 anni fa·140 comments

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altun
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I guess it's like Trump saying, "I'll take Greenland too..."
altun
·2 mesi fa·discuss
[dead]
altun
·2 anni fa·discuss
There is a proverb in Turkish that means “One madman (ein Chinese) threw a stone into a well, forty wise men couldn't get it out.” This discussion is a bit like that.

Turkish proverb: "Bir deli bir kuyuya taş atmış, kırk akıllı çıkaramamış."
altun
·3 anni fa·discuss
Previously, golang sub reddit came to the top in golang searches. The first title on the subreddit was "Why people hate Go?" was the title. Now go.dev comes first and reddit is below without title.

When you search reddit golang, the title continues to come first.
altun
·3 anni fa·discuss
There is a tragicomic story that I think is related to this question.

Quote from Ian Lance Taylor (Google Principal Engineer)

"Now a bit of personal history. The Go project was started, by Rob, Robert, and Ken, as a bottom-up project. I joined the project some 9 months later, on my own initiative, against my manager's preference. There was no mandate or suggestion from Google management or executives that Google should develop a programming language. For many years, including well after the open source release, I doubt any Google executives had more than a vague awareness of the existence of Go (I recall a time when Google's SVP of Engineering saw some of us in the cafeteria and congratulated us on a release; this was surprising since we hadn't released anything recently, and it soon came up that he thought we were working on the Dart language, not the Go language.)"

https://groups.google.com/g/golang-nuts/c/6dKNSN0M_kg/m/EUzc...
altun
·3 anni fa·discuss
You are right. But until last weekend, it continued to appear. It currently does not appear in queries made within Germany.
altun
·3 anni fa·discuss
Related: The State of WebAssembly 2023

https://blog.scottlogic.com/2023/10/18/the-state-of-webassem....
altun
·3 anni fa·discuss
The real joke, I guess, is that hundreds of people are talking about this.
altun
·4 anni fa·discuss
Life was, in a way, colored by the mystery involved. With every innovation that comes, there are also things that it eliminates.
altun
·4 anni fa·discuss
I don't understand why someone who has so much open source information, has the intelligence to learn C-level languages, and has a certain experience in the industry, would ask such a question.
altun
·4 anni fa·discuss
~ is the similarity sign as mathematical symbols.
altun
·5 anni fa·discuss
The interesting thing is that the following sentence is said years after it was decided to eliminate vfp.

"It's my hope that in five to 10 years, programming languages simply will have queries as a concept"
altun
·5 anni fa·discuss
The article I read years ago. I could not find that article, I found a similar one.

https://visualstudiomagazine.com/blogs/desmond-file/2007/03/...
altun
·5 anni fa·discuss
C # creator Anders Hejlsberg made a statement a few years after the .net platform came into being, recognizing that data was very important and admitting that they were developing linq.
altun
·5 anni fa·discuss
It ranks 33rd on the tiobe list, where Rust is 30th.