For different use cases you'll find each of them having a different set of benefits or shortcomings over the other, so knowing a bit about what you intend to do would make it easier to offer an informed opinion.
That being said, Rust is slightly harder to get into but a much better option than Go where basic things like error handling may feel incredibly backwards depending on how you view languages. Rust code has a reputation along the lines of "if it compiled then it works", which is always nice.
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For different use cases you'll find each of them having a different set of benefits or shortcomings over the other, so knowing a bit about what you intend to do would make it easier to offer an informed opinion.
That being said, Rust is slightly harder to get into but a much better option than Go where basic things like error handling may feel incredibly backwards depending on how you view languages. Rust code has a reputation along the lines of "if it compiled then it works", which is always nice.