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Python post-Guido

Python post-Guido

Posted Jul 18, 2018 14:40 UTC (Wed) by malefic (subscriber, #37306)
In reply to: Python post-Guido by edomaur
Parent article: Python post-Guido

Rust also has a bunch of people working on it full-time, backed by a large corporation with a clear set of goals. It is not a community project in a sense Python is. It is also worth mentioning that, despite all the buzz, Rust is still a niche language compared to Python, and there are probably far fewer people suggesting various "syntax improvements" on the mailing lists.

I think that dictatorship is the only way to keep Python going off the rails. Whether it's a single BDFL or three doesn't really matter.


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Python post-Guido

Posted Jul 19, 2018 5:09 UTC (Thu) by edomaur (subscriber, #14520) [Link]

" It is not a community project in a sense Python is."

And how does it even matter ? The decision process is completely open and Rust is not Java even if there are corporation backed contributors. And about the "niche language" aspect, that's true that the Rust community is (at least for the moment) smaller than the Python one, but Rust is quite young too. What I tried to communicate was that it just seems to work and that from the beginning they tried to follow a scalable approach to language design.

Their is not much example of bad "dictatorized" project still around, because they tend to die or to be forked. However, I realize that perhaps I misunderstood what you were meaning with "dictatorship" : are you, by this word, speaking about arbitration authority ? Like, the Debian Technical Committee, the LibreOffice Engineering Steering Committee, how the various project in Apache are managed and so on ? Having a unique Man having the role of a local god is not the most successful way of doing community but yes, there are some real high profile exceptions. And even then, in the case of Linux it's not a dictatorship anyway, it's more a "release managership" (imho)


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