Mike Parker wrote:
Bill Baxter wrote:
2009/11/5 Jonas Byström <highfest...@gmail.com>:
Hi,
I had great hope that D within a few years would be the new standard
for people requiring high performance from their language. Then I got
wiser
(http://www.inc.com/magazine/20091101/does-slow-growth-equal-slow-death.html?partner=fogcreek),
realizing that D must invade the C/C++ space to not dissappear. And,
sadly, D has not done that, and is definitely moving towards filling
a hole in cyberspace
(http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html).
Heck, it's not even listed on Language Shootout any more.
To gain popularity, I would guess that you need to integrate with
Microsofts Visual Studio (plugin compiler and syntax highlighting).
And that you need a few larger projects on board, such as game engines.
There is still hope! Use it or loose it. :)
It's "losing" and "lose", BTW.
--bb
My biggest pet peeve in the Internet Age, that.
I have two more that compliment that. Some people think there writing
"complement" and "they're" correctly but they aren't.
Andrei