Hi

[2019-01-25 17:53] Nick <suckless-...@njw.me.uk>
> Quoth Hiltjo Posthuma:
> > On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 02:21:26PM +0000, Nick wrote:
> > > That way we can devote the mailing list to more productive pursuits,
> > > like arguing for the millionth time that C++ is terrible.
> > > 
> > 
> > Don't keep spamming the mailinglist with the same things then. It is up to 
> > the
> > community to make the mailinglist interesting. An example could be to post 
> > your
> > personal projects (that conform to the suckless philosophy ofcourse) or 
> > patches
> > that make the software world better.
> > 
> > It is a community group effort to make suckless an interesting and fun 
> > place to
> > be.
>
> I know, I was just joking, I agree.
>
> On that subject, I've been really enjoying writing Go code, lately.  
> It's the first high level language I've properly enjoyed using for 
> an extended period of time, and the standard library is great. My 
> favourite thing about it is that there aren't really many language 
> features, but what is there is very powerful (interfaces ftw!), so 
> it's easy to learn, understand, and read.
>
> I'm still learning, so figuring out the best ways to construct and 
> organise things is a work in progress (my first proper project had 
> many tiny libraries, which is annoying), but I'm getting there. And 
> the journey to becoming competent in a different language is 
> certainly helping me think through problems in new ways, which is 
> always good.
>
> Anybody else enjoying Go? Or hating it? Have I become lazy and 
> trendy in my middle age?

The opinions on Go are mixed on this list from what I remember.

Personally, I have been writing Go backend code at my day job for almost
two years now and I enjoy it a lot. Like any language, it has its issues
and it's not the best tool for everything. It's a good one for the kind
of software I have to write though (mostly REST services).


Cheers,

Silvan

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