Yeah sounds more like a java issue to me. Clojure is usually beautifully terse and straight-to-business with very little boilerplate, and it usually runs on the jvm.
But still agree with the other commenter on the benefits of go. I’m not a huge fan of go, but it’s definitely encourages grug brain style (https://grugbrain.dev/) which has many benefits.
In fact, the only time I disagree with grug style is when I’m really close to the perfect generics for a TS function with lots of coupled inputs. Always so close…
But still agree with the other commenter on the benefits of go. I’m not a huge fan of go, but it’s definitely encourages grug brain style (https://grugbrain.dev/) which has many benefits.
In fact, the only time I disagree with grug style is when I’m really close to the perfect generics for a TS function with lots of coupled inputs. Always so close…