The natural comparisons are libraries like glibc and newlib, which do support lots of architectures and more importantly make porting to new architectures or taking advantage of platform features pretty straightforward.
I’m not as experienced as some people here, but in ~10 years, I’ve never needed to write code for anything other than x86 or arm. So I agree with the author on their priorities.
I’m not as experienced as some people here, but in ~10 years, I’ve never needed to write code for anything other than x86 or arm. So I agree with the author on their priorities.