Jun 12, 2019, 11:10 PM

@Auspice said in Accounting for gender imbalances:

@Sparks said in Accounting for gender imbalances:

@Auspice said in Accounting for gender imbalances:

My father is a developer. Apparently he used to, if he saw a job he was interested in but didn't know the language, put it on his resume, apply, then go out and buy a couple books to teach it to himself leading up to any potential interview.

So, so many guys do this. So many.

I mean, he managed to pull it off but it baffles me to this day. I can't learn shit like that. I'm over here trying to switch gears from learning python to ruby and I wanna cry sometimes. XD

whispers into your soul Python is better. Stay with the Python...

In fairness, Ruby's actually a perfectly fine language and well worth learning. I'm personally just used to using Python on a daily basis to create CI build scripts at work, for machine learning stuff (which is primarily in Python these days, it feels like), and so on. After so much Python, doing Ruby always feels like I'm driving someone else's car for a bit; I know how to do everything, but the windshield wiper toggle is in the wrong place, the parking brake is a pedal versus a stick, etc. So I just have to force my mind into Ruby mode instead of thinking Pythonically, and that annoys me enough that I default to Python for things.

(That said, I wish that they'd gotten the Ruby-style safe navigation operators into Python prior to the not-yet-released 3.8 version; i.e., Python's upcoming ?. equivalent to Ruby's &. operator. C'mon, guys. This thing is sanity-preserving, and should've been in Python 3 from the start.)