Ecosystem isn't that great, and much of it relies on the GC. If you're going to move out of C++, you might as well go all in on a GC language (Java, C#, Go) or use Rust. D's value proposition isn't enough to compete with those languages.
Ecosystem isn't that great, and much of it relies on the GC. If you're going to move out of C++, you might as well go all in on a GC language (Java, C#, Go) or use Rust. D's value proposition isn't enough to compete with those languages.
D has a GC and it’s optional. Which should be the best of both worlds in theory.
Also D is older than Go and Rust and only a few months younger than C#. So the question then becomes “why weren’t people using D when your recommended alternatives weren’t an option?” Or “why use the alternatives (when they were new) when D already exists?”
> D has a GC and it’s optional.
This is only true in the most technical sense: you can easily opt-out of the GC, but you will struggle with the standard library, and probably most third-party libraries too. It's the baseline assumption after all, hence why it's opt-out, not opt-in. There was a DConf talk about the future of Phobos which indicated increased support for @nogc, but this is a ways away, and even then. If you're opting-out of the GC, you are giving up a lot. And honestly, if you really don't want the GC, you may be better off with Zig.
Garbage collection has never been a major issue for most use cases. However, the Phobos vs. Tango and D1 vs. D2 splits severely slowed D’s adoption, causing it to miss the golden window before C++11, Go, and Rust emerged.