Rust has a very reassuring compile process. After I've made the compiler completely happy, I have an unusually high level of confidence in my code.
(It might not be doing the right thing, but it's robust and pleasant to refactor!)
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I've heard of 'blub languages', where you don't realise that other languages have better abstractions until you've experienced them.
I think the same thing happens with individual features. I've seen several C++ folks miss variadic generics in Rust, but I've not written enough C++ to feel it.
It's interesting to see the "why not Rust?" discussions around the TypeScript news that they're using Go. It shows that Rust has reached a level of maturity that it's a default for some users.
Go does seem to be in a sweet spot for AOT languages with GC though.
An interesting feature of the Grok TiddlyWiki interface: it has the sidebar on the right.
I see a sidebar on the left way more often, but arguably it makes more sense on the right for a wiki? The content is effectively more prominent.
https://groktiddlywiki.com/read/