There is a good compromise with reflection, attributes, metaclasses, one line lambdas, comprehensions
Now the lack of machine code generation for something Lisp was doing in the 1960's, Smalltalk in the 1980's, SELF in 1990's, and having to fall back on C, C++ and Fortran is bonkers.
Thankfully this is finally becoming a priority for those willing to sponsor the effort, and kudos to those making it happen.
I would rather use Common Lisp, in something like Allegro, but I will hardly find such a job, thus only arguing about language features doesn't take us that far.
There is a good compromise with reflection, attributes, metaclasses, one line lambdas, comprehensions
Now the lack of machine code generation for something Lisp was doing in the 1960's, Smalltalk in the 1980's, SELF in 1990's, and having to fall back on C, C++ and Fortran is bonkers.
Thankfully this is finally becoming a priority for those willing to sponsor the effort, and kudos to those making it happen.
I would rather use Common Lisp, in something like Allegro, but I will hardly find such a job, thus only arguing about language features doesn't take us that far.