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I sometimes wonder if there is too much emphasis on the idea of that some piece of software is abandoned. By which I mean that new and actively developed software isn't bug free and if a tool does the job it does the job. There's no guarantee that an active project in version 0.9 is going to fix any particular bug soon short of me [in theory] fixing it myself.

It's not as if much has changed in 2015 that would introduce show stopping bugs that weren't around in 2009. The process is the same, evaluate the tool against the problem domain and compile from source if it seems like a reasonable fit. Active development doesn't change the fact that there is no silver bullet.



You're right in general, but it seems that no language that is being actively used by a non-trivially sized community ever sits still. The more we use our languages (computer or human) the more they evolve. They are a form of communication. We are always evolving our communications methods and wanting more ways of expressing ourselves.


1. ANSI Common Lisp is nearly 25 years old.

2. Picking up another language is the quantum leap in the possibilities of expression. Point releases aren't. To the point, if Lush expresses what a person wants to express, then it does so. It's not like people suddenly turn around and rewrite working legacy while loops as list comprehensions just for fun.




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