> There is no magic, we can all be equals in this place.
...in the Harrison Bergeron sense.
The fact that Rust has attracted relatively inexperienced coders to do bare-metal, real-time programming shows that you don't need to nerf the language in order to appeal to interested developers of all skill levels.
Who said anything about attracting inexperienced developers? If anything I'd argue that's a negative for a healthy ecosystem, and I'd argue it has been a negative for Rust.
It's the junior engineers that most often struggle with trying to devise a way to use every language feature under the sun when solving a problem, not the other way around.
...in the Harrison Bergeron sense.
The fact that Rust has attracted relatively inexperienced coders to do bare-metal, real-time programming shows that you don't need to nerf the language in order to appeal to interested developers of all skill levels.