Dnia 2020-01-16, o godz. 03:12:49 JuciÊ Andrade <oju...@gmail.com> napisał(a):
> Liam has a point. Go is not attracting attention as it used to do. Go > ceased to generate news. Google Trends are based on searched terms, not on an analysis of some mainstream media headlines. My interpretation of OP linked "flat" line: "Go has matured, its docs and books are so excellent that Go programmers need not to desperately look for a hint from someone else bitten by an obscure piece of the language or of its standard libs". > Other projects attracts attention by aggregating new features often. Other projects attracts searches by pushing features important to tiny but vocal minorities focused on their narrow savings of a keystroke here and there. Then everyone (off this tiny minority) who stumbles upon such "feature" does WTFII? search, often in rush. Go searches raise only with raising number of Go users. Java and C++ searches peak not because there are more users, these peaks because every *existing*, even seasoned user of these languages day to day knows about them less and less. > I think we need to add a killer feature now and then. This is the last thing Go community needs. TC, -- Wojciech S. Czarnecki << ^oo^ >> OHIR-RIPE -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/golang-nuts/20200121174738.365af850%40xmint.