in reply to Re^2: Announcing Perl 7
in thread Announcing Perl 7

> it all rests on the backwards compatibility.

Watch the announcement. Sawyer talks about people who need that and how Perl treated them in the past, and why it's time to change it.

map{substr$_->[0],$_->[1]||0,1}[\*||{},3],[[]],[ref qr-1,-,-1],[{}],[sub{}^*ARGV,3]

Replies are listed 'Best First'.
Re^4: Announcing Perl 7
by dsheroh (Monsignor) on Jun 29, 2020 at 08:53 UTC
    Yes, he does talk about it, but I can't say I found it terribly convincing. Particularly given that he characterized "people who don't use (or don't want to use) Perl any more" as the only ones who care about stability or backwards compatibility, and presumed that anyone doing current development wants whiz-bang new features to be added and on by default ASAP, even if it means they have to go back and fix their older code to account for it.

    Can't speak for anyone else, but I currently work with Perl code both as a developer and a sysadmin, I have no intention of reducing or stopping my usage of Perl, and yet I prefer to build on a solid foundation rather than shifting sands.