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19:46
how
 
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21:55
9
A: can one make concurrent scalable reliable programs in C as in erlang?

gleberYes, it is possible, but... Probably the best answer for this question is given by Robert Virding’s First Rule: “Any sufficiently complicated concurrent program in another language contains an ad hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of Erlang.” Very go...

How does it come C/C++ has not been designed with concurrency and reliability in mind unlike rlang?
22:20
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn a couple of reasons.... the first being that when C and C++ were designed multiprocessing was a theoretical thing that wasn't really done. Parallelism was the CRAY 1 or CDC machines that preceded it etc. C was designed to basically be "portable" assembly. C++ was designed to suck slightly less than C. Since then C++ has gotten coroutines and threading constructs. C has just gotten threads
TLDR: Because you can't design what doesn't exist. Also even erlang didn't start out with multiprocessing. It just happens that functional languages lend themselves to it well.

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