I’d suggest learning a couple more languages - after you’ve learned a few, you get used to it - you don’t even see the code. All I see is assignment, variable, parameter…
(But seriously, the vast majority of imperative languages have syntax which is near-enough the same that it really doesn’t matter - much like two spaces vs four spaces, you can spend days, weeks, months arguing about which is better… or you can flip a coin, pick one, and after 5 minutes of using it you’re used to it, freeing up your brain to worry about more useful things :) )
missing the point here, if the goal is to migrate people away from C++ to this new thing, it's easier. less error prone to keep syntax similar. That's why Java was so successful.
I’d suggest learning a couple more languages - after you’ve learned a few, you get used to it - you don’t even see the code. All I see is assignment, variable, parameter…
(But seriously, the vast majority of imperative languages have syntax which is near-enough the same that it really doesn’t matter - much like two spaces vs four spaces, you can spend days, weeks, months arguing about which is better… or you can flip a coin, pick one, and after 5 minutes of using it you’re used to it, freeing up your brain to worry about more useful things :) )