The existence of golang in the market at this point in history provides a halfmeasure between Java (or Node.js/Python), and going all the way to Rust.
Go's first public version is from November 2009, Rust's first public version is from July 2010. I guess they are from the same point of history
Anyway, I don't think Go and Rust entirely cover the same domains, as you hinted Rust is more of a systems programming language and Go is more of a general purpose language.
I'm sure expert developers can decide what to use in which context :)
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
Go's first public version is from November 2009, Rust's first public version is from July 2010. I guess they are from the same point of history
Anyway, I don't think Go and Rust entirely cover the same domains, as you hinted Rust is more of a systems programming language and Go is more of a general purpose language.
I'm sure expert developers can decide what to use in which context :)