In the early 2000's, I was part of a startup delivering an application framework for web development based on Tcl/C, similar to AOLServer, just with our own view how it should actually look like.
It was a memorable experience, which I still fondly remember.
However it was also what made me not invest in languages without JIT/AOT thereafter, having to always dive into C all the time.
The relation of Tcl/C code changed quite heavily during the growth of the company, until we eventually rebooted our stack on top of the newly released .NET.
Something that we keep seeing on those "X rewritten in Y" over here.
It was a memorable experience, which I still fondly remember.
However it was also what made me not invest in languages without JIT/AOT thereafter, having to always dive into C all the time.
The relation of Tcl/C code changed quite heavily during the growth of the company, until we eventually rebooted our stack on top of the newly released .NET.
Something that we keep seeing on those "X rewritten in Y" over here.