It’s not that there is evidence that it doesn’t matter, but there is no evidence showing that it does.
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Eh research shows otherwise. Rust eliminates defects for a very particular set of problems, but when it comes to logical correctness it isn’t better or worse than other languages.
Can you concede, at least to yourself, that you made ^ this ^ up?
By the way, what you claimed “research shows” is so ridiculous that it’s hilarious that you wrote it while being serious.
Hell, I cheekily mentioned Python and JS in particular because the former introduced type hints and the latter triggered creating TS as a saner shield.
Btw, that wrongly-constructed URL wasn’t even an external one. We literally have web frameworks that make sure non-external URLs with invalid paths are impossible to construct. In other words, attempting to construct a wrong one would be a compile error.
By the way, what you claimed “research shows” is so ridiculous that it’s hilarious that you wrote it while being serious.
There is still no research that definitively shows that static types reduce defects more than dynamic types, this is a fact. Turns out we are incredibly bad at studying this, so I don’t know how you can say definitively that it is the case when even the people who study this for a living are not able to make that case.
Eh research shows otherwise. Rust eliminates defects for a very particular set of problems, but when it comes to logical correctness it isn’t better or worse than other languages.
Come on. What was requested by the other user is clear, I think.
You made this specific claim. Can you link to the research showing that? Actual research showing that “Rust eliminates defects for a very particular set of problems, but when it comes to logical correctness it isn’t better or worse than other languages”, not a YT video from a wannabe intellectual talking abstracts and siting some generic studies.