• @quaternaut
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    159 months ago

    Seems interesting. Wonder whether this is going to further spark Rust adoption in the enterprise.

    • @echo64
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      89 months ago

      It’s more likely that they see rust as a good successor to their legacy c++ code. Microsoft has always been heavily invested in C++ after all.

      They don’t want to sell rust. It’s not a money maker for them.

      • bluGill
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        fedilink
        79 months ago

        The article is clear that this is about C# not C++. Is the romance for managed languages wearing off - I wonder what issues they are seeing.

        Microsoft is big in C++, but they are also pushing C++ to be a lot safer. Modern C++ isn’t as safe as rust, but it is still much safer than C or C++98.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Tail latency and memory usage?

          It’s hard for me to come up with any other big advantages that Rust has and C# couldn’t easily lift.

    • TechNom (nobody)
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      fedilink
      English
      19 months ago

      I think enterprises are the early adopters and proponents of Rust. They seem so stoked about the memory safety aspect.

      • bluGill
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        19 months ago

        As a C++ developer memory safety catches my attention. I keep rejecting code reviews - in 2024! - because of naked new. Since experience proves I can’t get people to use the memory safety modern C++ offers I need to force the issue.

        unfortunaty rust has other choices that don’t play well with our existing C++ so it will be a long road.