I'm sure my thought is off-topic and is not applicable, I shall give a try 
after seeing the trends in programming and non-programming world. There is 
an "overlap" between Generic and non-Generic. If it can be solve between 
the two sides, that's easy with "translation" to and back?

When we have a language barrier, Google Translator makes that possible or 
ignore everything I said here.
When Go can cross-compile to different OS architectures, it could be 
applicable for source code as well.

On Wednesday, 30 December 2020 at 20:27:15 UTC+8 Space A. wrote:

> Go doesn't have classes and is not an OOP language.
>
> Classes (like in Java) vs structs (like in Go) is about inheritance vs 
> composition, not about attaching fields and methods. Inheritance implies 
> type hierarchy, child and parent, virtual functions, abstract and final 
> implementations and so on so forth to keep this all of this manageable.
>
>
>
> вторник, 29 декабря 2020 г. в 23:27:45 UTC+3, Alex Besogonov: 
>
>> Please, stop being so condescending to newcomers and non-professional 
>> developers. Generics as uses by end-users will improve their experience, 
>> not make it harder.
>>
>> (And what is this obsession with "classes"? Go has them - structs with 
>> methods are classes).
>>
>> On Tuesday, December 29, 2020 at 1:32:30 AM UTC-8 
>> rickti...@googlemail.com wrote:
>>
>>> My point of view is that Generics should not become part of the Go 
>>> standard library. I appreciate there are use cases where it is very helpful 
>>> to have, but I do not believe that adds value to Go. The real value for Go 
>>> is it's simplicity, avoidance of generics and avoidance of classes. This 
>>> makes the language accessible and approachable to all, which is 
>>> increasingly more valuable. Go appeals to new-comers and experienced 
>>> developers because it is simple, and comfortable. The rate of uptake in 
>>> computing technology is still subject to Moores law, and today we see a new 
>>> type of programmer emerging, the 'citizen developer'.  
>>>
>>> Go follows time proven computational concepts, it does not follow the 
>>> 'new paradigm' tribes, it's roots are firmly planted in statically typed 
>>> procedural/functional programming techniques, and this maps well to much of 
>>> the literature available. The growth of entry level developers ( aka 
>>> 'citizen developers' ) will be exponential over the next decade, and in 
>>> that landscape it is Go's simplicity that will win the day.
>>>
>>> On Monday, 28 December 2020 at 17:35:40 UTC L Godioleskky wrote:
>>>
>>>> " If generics gets added to Go, we're opening a very dangerous door, and
>>>> it will be the downfall of Go because - and Robert Griesemer this is
>>>> especially addressed to you - what's next then? Seriously, what's next? 
>>>> ... "
>>>>
>>>> .. AI, followed by cryto currency and asexual repoduction
>>>> On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 at 5:09:05 AM UTC-5 Martin Hanson wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> No polls. It's not a matter of majority rule! 
>>>>>
>>>>> It's a matter of understanding why generics was left out of Go from 
>>>>> the 
>>>>> start, like classes was left out of Go. If we start adding stuff that 
>>>>> the original developers of Go left out by purpose, we're not 
>>>>> understanding the design choices that went into Go, which is exactly 
>>>>> what makes Go unique! 
>>>>>
>>>>> Go was a major slap in the face to all the hype that has polluted the 
>>>>> programming industry for the past 30-40 years, which is why Go got so 
>>>>> much hate in the beginning from all the hype loving people. 
>>>>>
>>>>> If you want to add generics to Go, if you want to change how errors 
>>>>> are 
>>>>> handled, if you want X, Y or Z feature that Java, C++, or some other 
>>>>> complex language has got, then go use that language! Why are you even 
>>>>> here!? 
>>>>>
>>>>> The design choices that went into Go was not made randomly, nor were 
>>>>> they made by just anyone. Please understand that the people who 
>>>>> designed Go, and we all know who they are, had/has tons of experience 
>>>>> and the pragmatic approach they took is what make Go stand out so 
>>>>> beautifully! 
>>>>>
>>>>> If generics gets added to Go, we're opening a very dangerous door, and 
>>>>> it will be the downfall of Go because - and Robert Griesemer this is 
>>>>> especially addressed to you - what's next then? Seriously, what's 
>>>>> next? 
>>>>> Let the community decide by majority!? Is that how we design a 
>>>>> professional programming language now? By majority rule?! NO! The 
>>>>> majority is all about hype and shine. 
>>>>>
>>>>> Adding generics to Go will rip out the spine of the philosophy of Go 
>>>>> and I for one will not be a part of that. I have more than 30 years of 
>>>>> experience in the business and I fully understand why generics and 
>>>>> classes and all the other clutter was left out of Go. 
>>>>>
>>>>> If generics gets added to Go, we're a big enough part of the 
>>>>> community, 
>>>>> that passionately hate that, that we can manage to fork Go - which I 
>>>>> strongly believe will then be the right thing to do! 
>>>>>
>>>>

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