Along that way is C++ and "we should attempt to be a superset of all programming paradigms". Fewer features is better, and more restrictions allow better tooling and iteration if they don't functionally restrict the programmer.
Basically, I'm not sure of the benefit of building go on top of nim. They appear to fill the same space in orthogonal ways.
Basically, I'm not sure of the benefit of building go on top of nim. They appear to fill the same space in orthogonal ways.