On Wednesday, 16 April 2014 at 08:21:37 UTC, Bienlein wrote:
On Tuesday, 15 April 2014 at 19:19:00 UTC, Jordi Sayol wrote:
El 11/04/14 12:10, Walter Bright ha escrit:
but hey, now we have D.
Yeah, I like D far better than Java.
+1000
So do I. But for Java there is Hibernate, Hadoop, Cassandra,
DI, JSF, JMS, JTA, SOAP, REST, vert.x, Quartz, web servers,
application servers, various NoSQL-DBs and I don't know what.
As you most often need some of those things in enterprise
computing I'm pretty much bound to Java.
There are a number of job adds for Go developers (see
http://golangprojects.com). Go seems to be a good complement
for Ruby, Python, PHP which are slow and have bad concurrency.
Then Go seems to appeal to companies whose product is some
server-side application (like some cloud offering or PaaS).
I believe D could also play well in this server-side arena like
Go. Maybe with the FiberScheduler developed by Sean Kelly D can
also offer "dead-simple" concurrency and be appealing to
developing cloud solutions or other style of server-side
applications for which easy concurrency is a big plus.
-- Bienlein
I use vibe.d for a small server side application. It's quite
fast, although we haven't tested it on a larger scale yet. On the
downside, vibe.d's API is not quite intuitive, so it takes a
while to get used to it. But that might be down to the fact that
it's not easy to write an intuitive API for the web with all the
different bits and pieces that have different logics to them.