The designers of Swift have adopted a pragmatic approach to things: get a 
language that can be useful practically quickly, then improve it as things go. 
Its very Apple-like and I think it makes a lot of sense. We have a lot of 
useful changes in Swift 3.0, but the language is still far from complete. 
Recent discussions make it very obvious that some fundamental features are 
still in flux or are misunderstood (e.g the function argument label 
discussion), and the generics implementation has a lot of important stuff 
missing. Freezing Swift now  would mean suspending it in a beta state. 

So, no, a strong disagree with the premise of this thread from me. 

Best, 

 Taras
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