I on the contrary, I rather reach out to C++, even though I like D, it isn't the features, it is the ecosystem.
Otherwise I rather stay in JVM/CLR/V8 land, when I don't need to.
I have been around D since Andrei Alexandrescu's book was published, even he is now back in C++ at NVidia, as his main work after he kind of stepped away from his role in D development.
And he is one of the figures on C++26 reflection papers.
Oh C++ has the clear advantage in libraries available, for sure. That's not really due to the languages themselves though I'd say. I'm honestly not quite sure why C++ got widely adopted and D did not.
Almost two decades predating it, and sadly no OS vendor picked up on it.
Many people forget C++ is a C sibling, born at AT&T on the same building UNIX and C were being handled, thus it was quite an easy win for C compiler vendors, to add C++ support to their toolchains.
Note that Objective-C also never made it outside NeXT, GNUStep was never that good clone, and had it not been for Apple's acquision and success, maybe we would no longer speak about it.
When Facebook or Remedy Games played with D, we hoped it would somehow improve adoption, that was never the case, and both companies no longer use D.
Otherwise I rather stay in JVM/CLR/V8 land, when I don't need to.
I have been around D since Andrei Alexandrescu's book was published, even he is now back in C++ at NVidia, as his main work after he kind of stepped away from his role in D development.
And he is one of the figures on C++26 reflection papers.