On 10/6/2017 10:19 PM, Adam Wilson via Digitalmars-d wrote:
What if we stop focusing on the C/C++ people so much? The like their tools and have no perceivable interest in moving away from them (Stockholm Syndrome much?). The arguments the use are primarily meant as defensive ploys, because they compare everything to C/C++ and when it doesn't match in some way or another the other language must be deficient. They've already decided that C/C++ is the meter stick against which all other languages are to be judged. Unsurprisingly, nothing that is NOT C/C++ meets their exacting demands.

I saw we ditch the lot and focus on the large languages where D can get some traction (C#/Java).

Or recognize that painting huge diverse groups as if there's a single brush with which to do so is a huge fallacy.  Consider that the two leaders, as well as a large number of the contributing developers, come from the c++ community and that's not a bad thing, but rather a big part of _why_ they came to D.

As always, focusing on the users of the language tends to pay a lot more dividends than focusing on nay sayers.  Luckily, that's how things tend to proceed here, so yay for that.

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