This has always been what kept me away from Erlang/Elixir (which I gave serious consideration as both a project technology and a career path in it's 2010 era revival).
I've gotten to the point I can adapt to missing libraries but what it does at runtime is very different from anything else.
I don't do a lot of server side node.js but I have a lot of confidence if someone called me at midnight saying their node service was down I could jump in and start making progress fast. I think it would take some time running Erlang in production to get there.
I've gotten to the point I can adapt to missing libraries but what it does at runtime is very different from anything else.
I don't do a lot of server side node.js but I have a lot of confidence if someone called me at midnight saying their node service was down I could jump in and start making progress fast. I think it would take some time running Erlang in production to get there.