"fast" is incredibly tricky, but I think the best way to understand Rust's tagline is "Safe & Concurrent, and 1/
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objectively faster than other languages that can reasonably claim to be safe and concurrent" 2/2
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Replying to @wycats @withoutboats
imo "fast" is just an easier to grok/measure proxy for "provides control".
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Not necessarily though. Mathematica is fast. It does not provide control. Depends on the context.
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Replying to @ManishEarth @Gankro and
But for general purpose languages, yes, so far "fast" has been a proxy for "provides control".
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I don't love this. asm.js provides control, but that doesn't make *JS* fast.
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Replying to @wycats @ManishEarth and
most dynamic languages have a lot of control (FFI, C APIs) but the lang itself isn't "fast"
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if you would like a more nuanced perspective on this topic, please see: my entire master's thesis :)
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link?
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I still love the "we" convention in dissertations.
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whenever I see "I" in a document I instantly go to "UMM EXCUSE ME? WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?"
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