Perhaps. The feeling I get with Julia is that the devs are sort of making it up as they go along. I don't mean just making up the language (which of course they're doing), but making up whole new approaches to programming that aren't necessarily well-understood and tested in the real world and certainly aren't very familiar to most programmers.
Maybe in the end they will succeed and will invent a generally superior approach to software development. But for the moment it all feels very experimental and so not a language I'd want to commit to at present if I were starting a major, non-solo project.
Maybe in the end they will succeed and will invent a generally superior approach to software development. But for the moment it all feels very experimental and so not a language I'd want to commit to at present if I were starting a major, non-solo project.