It might take a bite into it. But if you're already taking the bullet on switching a language then there's so many options out there nowadays. There's nothing about Rust that handily beats all alternatives
I don't know about "no reason". Having a stable code-base that you don't need to update every few months because the language evolved underneath might be another reason.
I don't know. I know they introduced their "epoch" system to try and deal with language changes. But I've seen people recommend non-stable stuff in that community all the time, because "everyone uses that".
@fredoverflow Hey I am new here and I find your videos interesting. I just noticed that you use using std::string instead of using namespace std;, but then you use std::cout. I was wondering, why not use using namespace std;?
I've been told by others that writing using namespace std; in code is wrong, and that I should use std::cout and std::cin directly instead.
Why is using namespace std; considered a bad practice? Is it inefficient or does it risk declaring ambiguous variables (variables that share the same name a...
@MangaD I would always choose C++ because 1) C++ is faster to write and maintain due to lack of pedantic checks 2) better template support 3) better library support (and less dumb stuff like poorly performing hash maps that are always randomized) . Note #3 doesn't say much about the language