Re: 10 lesser known languages, but no dlang?
On Wednesday, 8 June 2016 at 15:52:49 UTC, Wyatt wrote: On Wednesday, 8 June 2016 at 10:08:11 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad wrote: http://programmingzen.com/2016/06/07/10-lesser-known-programming-languages-worth-exploring/ Maybe someone feel the inspiration to add a thoughtful comment in the comment-section on the article with a pointer to dlang.org? Weird, he has Rust, Haxe, and Julia? Are those really lesser-known, at this point? Rust is more well known than D at least. There were plenty of languages mentioned on the reddit-thread as well. I even found a new system level language I had not heard of: https://github.com/ark-lang/ark Appears to be implemented in Go, and is positioning itself between C and C++, or so they say.
Re: 10 lesser known languages, but no dlang?
On Wednesday, 8 June 2016 at 15:52:49 UTC, Wyatt wrote: And basically _no one_ knows about J... i know! i even know about CLU!
Re: 10 lesser known languages, but no dlang?
On Wednesday, 8 June 2016 at 10:08:11 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad wrote: http://programmingzen.com/2016/06/07/10-lesser-known-programming-languages-worth-exploring/ Maybe someone feel the inspiration to add a thoughtful comment in the comment-section on the article with a pointer to dlang.org? Weird, he has Rust, Haxe, and Julia? Are those really lesser-known, at this point? I expected to see F# in there, too, but nope! (And basically _no one_ knows about J...) -Wyatt
Re: 10 lesser known languages, but no dlang?
On Wednesday, 8 June 2016 at 10:20:01 UTC, Andre Pany wrote: On the other side, maybe D is not mentioned, because it belongs in the meantime to the more known languages :) That would be a good sign. :-) Regardless, language-geeks will find this page through google search in the next 10 years so a an inviting sales-pitch is helpful.
Re: 10 lesser known languages, but no dlang?
On Wednesday, 8 June 2016 at 10:08:11 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad wrote: http://programmingzen.com/2016/06/07/10-lesser-known-programming-languages-worth-exploring/ Maybe someone feel the inspiration to add a thoughtful comment in the comment-section on the article with a pointer to dlang.org? On the other side, maybe D is not mentioned, because it belongs in the meantime to the more known languages :) That would be a good sign. Kind regards André