| ▲ | apelapan 4 months ago | ||||||||||||||||
If you look at it that way, nobody is good at anything. True perhaps but not a very useful stance. Millions of people have built meaningful software with C++ over the past several decades. It is everywhere and it mostly works OK. Of course, C++ is not necessarily the best choice for everything or anything. But it is a mostly reasonable choice for lots of things in 2025, just like it was in 1995. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | SleepyMyroslav 4 months ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
There are different levels of confidence in junior programmers code in different languages. For C++ it is one of the lowest possible. If thousands of HN readers suddenly decide that they need to start their 10+ years learning of C++ with immediate contribution to the Ladybird project it would be not really helpful, right? | |||||||||||||||||
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