If Go people succeeded with taking over some C area, that would be the direction right enough, don't you think? Simply because Go seems a bit better than C.
I'd love to see some modern SML or Haskell taking over the area of code compiled to binary, plus a constant growth of dynamic languages as well, because they are also cool. But that big revolution may not happen.
I'd love to see some modern SML or Haskell taking over the area of code compiled to binary, plus a constant growth of dynamic languages as well, because they are also cool. But that big revolution may not happen.