There are languages like D and Carbon that attempt this. But there are too many existing large C++ code bases to not continue evolving C++ itself as well.
There are languages like D and Carbon that attempt this. But there are too many existing large C++ code bases to not continue evolving C++ itself as well.
I didn't say replace, but complexity is the biggest barrier for newcomers. A lot of typing comparing to other languages. I use professionally since 90th, the more popular it gets the better. And complexity is the major problem, not memory management like some argue.