It's not my burden of proof. If you think something like compiling kotlin instead of running a JVM is akin to compiling with go tooling, then at this point anything that somehow compiles to native (and beyond) is in the "go niche".
You're the one asserting that it's unsuitable. So it very much is.
> If you think something like compiling kotlin instead of running a JVM is akin to compiling with go tooling, then at this point anything that somehow compiles to native (and beyond) is in the "go niche".
I don't know about the other commenters, but that's literally the only criteria you've deigned offer so far, aside from some sort of conspiratorial implications.
So if I say <any language> is in go's niche, it's your burden to disprove it?
Look, this is getting ridiculous. Go offers easy+fast tooling out of the box. Any JVM language, compiled or not, will never be anywhere NEAR go's tooling in those terms. The extra compilation layer just makes it actually much worse.
> There's at least one language server for Kotlin.
I didn't say there is none, I said that any modern language has one. An IDE is not a selling point anymore, in my humble opinion.
> you seem to have a very not-objective view of it for some reason
I just think that shoehorning Kotlin into "the go niche" is absurd , and that the "good code analysis" argument is moot.