> if you're building a startup and you pick OCaml, you've just cut your hiring pool by 95%. that's way more painful than learning a different way to write functions.
You can hire anyone who already understands pattern matching, closures, map/fold (these are more and more common constructs nowadays) and train them to learn OCaml. It's a simple language overall, especially if your codebase doesn't use any complicated features.
You can hire anyone who already understands pattern matching, closures, map/fold (these are more and more common constructs nowadays) and train them to learn OCaml. It's a simple language overall, especially if your codebase doesn't use any complicated features.