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Well this is interesting! I've been seeing Go pop up a lot lately. I admire your passion to explore and build. Would a Go implementation of the nectar libraries offer any potential benefits over their Python counterparts? πππβ¨π€
The most beneficial part of it is that it's a compiled language vs an interpreted one, which usually has some speed benefits (although on modern hardware this is mostly negligible and not the argument that it used to be)
But..
I like the idea of binary distribution. If I write a really cool tool and people that don't know much, but at least trust my tool can download
cool-tool / cool-tool.exeand that's it, no building, no environment setup, no fuss.Ah, OK, that's very interesting, and yes, I was aware of modern hardware making many software optimizations basically unnecessary.
Yes, binaries are way more efficient in terms of distribution and use, and they are ideal for people with limited technical understanding. Thanks a lot for the explanation, my friend, I really appreciate it. πππβ¨π€