=> Re: "Language to learn" | In: s/programming
Except that Python is a terrible language (as a language geek), the worst user experience I've encountered as a coder, and the most unstable environment where one day nothing works because some library you've never heard of changed. If they paid me to use it I'd quit.
Did I say this before? Yikes, going in circles here. Sorry.
=> ๐ stack
2024-12-16 ยท 7 weeks ago
=> ๐ผ erick ยท Dec 17 at 06:02:
@stack yeah, I think I saw your opinion when reading the comments. Too sad you have had that experience with Python, I on the other hand have had an amazing experience with it.
=> ๐ป darkghost ยท Dec 17 at 13:35:
My python experience is mixed. I've used it successfully for data processing of major datasets without much need for coding. But on the other hand, I wanted an application that was coded in python but it needed a newer minor version. So I set about installing it and when I rebooted my Linux distro: boom, no GUI. So I reverted, painstakingly finding all the damn symlinks and getting its hooks out. The solution was to upgrade to the newest release of the distro.
In summary, it took a distro upgrade to run a single application coded in a version of Python 2 minor revisions ahead. I get the criticism. I'm sure I could have avoided it but coding is neither my main job description nor a big hobby.
Language to learn โ Friends, which language a hobbyst like me would try seriously to learn? Like buy books and materials... I honestly learned a lot of languages since I was a kid: Pascal first as a kid, then Assembly and C when I entered technical school at 14, then Pascal again and VBA at university, then Python... But honestly, though I have some understanding of the principles, I don't consider myself proficient in any. I had to change jobs and profession a lot of times because of money...
=> ๐ฌ Houjimmy ยท 28 comments ยท 2024-12-04 ยท 8 weeks ago This content has been proxied by September (3851b).Proxy Information
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