[Info-vax] Rust as a HS language, was: Re: Quiet?
Arne Vajhøj
arne at vajhoej.dk
Tue Apr 5 20:36:32 EDT 2022
On 4/5/2022 8:27 PM, Dan Cross wrote:
> In article <624cdd77$0$704$14726298 at news.sunsite.dk>,
> Arne Vajhøj <arne at vajhoej.dk> wrote:
>> On 4/5/2022 8:21 PM, Dan Cross wrote:
>>> In article <t2ilf1$18mj$1 at gioia.aioe.org>,
>>> chris <chris-nospam at tridac.net> wrote:
>>>> I think the point is that languages take time to evolve and the path
>>>> can be unstable until there is enough critical mass to produce a fully
>>>> documented and standard version. I would expect that to take a decade
>>>> or more. No good for serious work without that professionalism. Toy
>>>> and experimental otherwise.
>>>
>>> Java doesn't have a "standard" in the sense described here, but
>>> much as I don't care for it as a language I'd be hard pressed to
>>> describe it as a "toy" or "no good for serious work."
>>
>> Java is not ISO/ANSI/ECMA standardized.
>>
>> But the JCP process is really very similar to ISO/ANSI/ECMA.
>
> Sounds kind of like the Rust RFC process, but some posters here
> seem to have suggested that without a document produced under
> the auspicies of a relevant standards body, a language is not
> viable for serious work.
I think several languages has been inspired by the JCP process.
For those not familiar with the process here is the short version:
- an expert group is formed
- the expert group produces a draft
- draft goes into public review and may be updated
based on feedback
- draft get approved or rejected by vote in the Executive Committee
Arne
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