| ▲ | Scubabear68 2 hours ago | |||||||
I got into Perl in the early 90s in the Perl4 days, watched the very weird but necessary Perl5 come into focus, then I saw Larry and the community in the 2000s get stars in their eyes and just throw it all away for the dream of Perl6. The real issue is not just that Perl6 wasn’t backwards compatible, it was that Perl6 basically did not exist for real for many, many years. People got tired of waiting, and the lack of backwards compatibility did not help. Also Perl6 was just more weird on top of weird from a mainstream perspective. Making it even harder to justify. | ||||||||
| ▲ | actionfromafar an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
And killing Perl 5 in the process. If Perl would have kept going in its own pace and Perl 6 would have been named Rapture or Raku from day one, Perl would have been fine. Nowadays when everyone and their dog (vcpkg) have a package system, it’s easy to overlook how magical CPAN was. A solution to the weirdest problem, just a package away. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | atherton94027 an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
It's interesting because you can still find interviews of Larry online how Perl is the first postmodern programming language but for perl6 they came up with a very top-down, modernist project | ||||||||