this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2023
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I can certainly see the trade-offs. I typically write high performance optimizers, so my dependency list is fairly compact; the big risk I see in general, without knowing anything of you application, is bug fixes or quality of life improvements. Those that manifest as full version bumps are fairly insidious with '*', and can make porting to the future a potential nightmare.
All that said, there's something nice about using a fixed version of common crates to develop against. One of the big advantages of languages like Python and Go is that robust stdlib which makes many tasks trivial to program assuming a wide enough coverage of libraries.