Sigismund Ninja on Nostr: I'm starting to think that maybe #golang, and not #rustlang, is for me. I really ...
I'm starting to think that maybe #golang, and not #rustlang, is for me. I really appreciate the philosophy that the language shall be small and simple.
Is there any "standard" subset of Rust that is kind of accepted by the community? I.e. if I basically want C with borrow checking and Rust compatible syntax?
At work, I'm struggling with the complexity and over-engineering that #cpp invites, and I want to move away from that. Unfortunately, Rust also seems to encourage that kind of practice.
Is there any "standard" subset of Rust that is kind of accepted by the community? I.e. if I basically want C with borrow checking and Rust compatible syntax?
At work, I'm struggling with the complexity and over-engineering that #cpp invites, and I want to move away from that. Unfortunately, Rust also seems to encourage that kind of practice.