That's not the Perl architectural design. Perl has a lightweight core and a pluggable module system. It works phenomenally well, has done for more than two decades, and made Perl a viable, commercially useful language that continues to provide professional software developers with high-paying jobs.

Many would say that Rakudo's stubborn insistence on attempting to do All the Things is what condemned it to be not viable, not commercially useful, and the provider of no high-paying jobs for software developers.


The way forward always starts with a minimal test.

In reply to Re^4: when is perl6 as fast as perl5 by 1nickt
in thread when is perl6 as fast as perl5 by xiaoyafeng

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