It’s more than 10 years old. It has stable syntax, big standard library, big library ecosystem, plenty of rust programs already in production.
If by “evolving” you mean “changing”, I don’t think that is an issue at all. At most, they add features. They don’t change or remove. And with the editions system, it should be no issue.
If by “evolving” you mean “improving”, then I don’t see how that could ever be an issue.
It’s very young for a programming language, and is still rapidly evolving.
It’s more than 10 years old. It has stable syntax, big standard library, big library ecosystem, plenty of rust programs already in production.
If by “evolving” you mean “changing”, I don’t think that is an issue at all. At most, they add features. They don’t change or remove. And with the editions system, it should be no issue.
If by “evolving” you mean “improving”, then I don’t see how that could ever be an issue.
It’s only a third of the age of C amirite 🙄