Then you top it on with `?` shortcut and the functional interface of Result and suddenly error handling becomes fun and easy to deal with, rather than just "return false" with a "TODO: figure out error handling".
Then you top it on with `?` shortcut and the functional interface of Result and suddenly error handling becomes fun and easy to deal with, rather than just "return false" with a "TODO: figure out error handling".
SerenityOS is the first functional OS (as in "boots on actual hardware and has a GUI") I've seen that dares question the 1970s int main() using modern C++ constructs instead, and the API is simply a lot better.
I can imagine someone writing a better standard library for C++ that works a whole lot like Rust's standard library does. Begone with the archaic integer types, make use of the power your language offers!
If we're comparing C++ and Rust, I think the ease of use of enum classes/structs is probably a bigger difference. You can get pretty close, but Rust avoids a lot of boilerplate that makes them quite usable, especially when combined with the match keyword.
I think c++, the language, is ready for the modern world. However, c++, the community, seems to be struck at least 20 years in the past.
And yes, being a "Typescript for C" born at the same place as UNIX and C, is both what fostered its adoption, among compiler and OS vendors, and also what brings some pains trying to herd cats to write safe code.