It isn't an argument against nextgen, it is an argument against defaults.
Not at all. It was only an argument against modules that change defaults, but don't do anything else. (Which is not a default at all, because you have to do something to enable it. So it's just a policy, not a default).
Perl 6 - links to (nearly) everything that is Perl 6.
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Why aren't they your cup of tea? would be the question that would permit me to make nextgen better, unfortunately I didn't ask that.
You cannot make nextgen good enough that I would use it. There are only three pragmas/modules I use in the majority of the code I write: 'use 5.010; use strict; use warnings;'. I write diverse code. Any other module will not be used in the majority of the code I write. Of course, you could have 'nextgen' take arguments, for instance, a list of modules to load - but then I may just sidestep it directly, and use them directly.
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