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Well, you're wrong about Haskell but in the general case you are right.

The idea that the creator of Haskell tried to put forth when he said he did not want the language to be popular was that it would mean losing the freedom to change things. As soon as a programming language achieves general adoption you immediately have the issue of technical debt and backwards compatibility to contend with, which would be a huge drawback in a research language.

It says something about the qualities of Haskell that it achieved substantial popularity in spite of this.



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