> so in a sense it does have a longer pedigree than most other tools of that ilk.
That's true of most new languages. It seems like most projects these days can produce a LSP with minimal effort, make the obvious choice of sandboxing every project separately to avoid dependency hells across projects, have at least basic distribution systems even with small communities, etc.
The community learned a lot from the mistakes of yore.
That's true of most new languages. It seems like most projects these days can produce a LSP with minimal effort, make the obvious choice of sandboxing every project separately to avoid dependency hells across projects, have at least basic distribution systems even with small communities, etc.
The community learned a lot from the mistakes of yore.