I think the main big thing that’s left for 1.0 is to resurrect async/await.. and that’s a huge thing because arguably very few if any language has gotten that truly right.
As the PR description mentions: “This is part of a series of changes leading up to "I/O as an Interface" and Async/Await Resurrection.”
So this work is partially related to getting async/await right. And getting IO right is a very important part of that.
I think it’s a good idea for Zig to try to avoid a Python 3 situation after they reach 1.0. The project seems fairly focused to me, but they’re trying to solve some difficult problems. And they spend more time working on the compiler and compiler infrastructure than other languages, which is also good. Working on their own backend is actually critical for the language itself, because part of what’s holding Zig back from doing async right is limitations and flaws in LLVM
Interesting. I like Zig. I dabble periodically. I’m hoping that maturity and our next generation ag tech device in a few years might intersect.
Throwing another colored function debacle in a language, replete with yet another round of the familiar but defined slightly differently keywords, would be a big turn off for me. I don’t even know if Grand Central Dispatch counts, but it—and of course Elixir/Erlang—are the only two “on beyond closures/callbacks” asynch system I’ve found worked well.