walterbyrd wrote: > If so, I doubt there are many. > > I wonder why that is? > I've now used Python in every job I've had for the last 10 years. Started off with web-sites for a few months, then writing VRML-processing libraries to piece together and massage virtual worlds (not a *lot* of jobs there). After that worked on a piece of Cable-system SNMP monitoring software (again, not a *lot* of jobs in that). After that billing/provisioning systems for VoIP (you really only need one). The last two companies (one of which I own, one in which I was a partner) were python-only shops.
PyGTA (Toronto Python User's Group), which is a fairly large user-group, seems to be about 60% (off-the-cuff estimate) paid Pythonistas, with some people picking it up for filling in corners and others spending all day working on it. The paid positions tend (like most programming positions in less-well-known general-purpose languages) to be programming + X for values of X which are a problem domain having an obscure nature. That is, boutique/bespoke development that requires some specialisation such that the customer is willing to go for whatever language is suitable and gets the job done. Regarding Java from one of the previous comments (and this is a cynical moment here, I'm really a far more positive person, just ignore this): There are still lots of jobs in Java, just as there are still lots of jobs in COBOL. Kids in the know (i.e. who *love* programming, rather than just wanting a job) going into university are minimising their Java exposure so that they don't box themselves into the big-old-company environments that have locked themselves into Java while everyone else moves onto the more dynamic languages/platforms. Job security and easy availability is not the be-all and end-all of happiness in life. That said, if you know anyone who "just wants a job", please, push them at Java, someone has to spend the next 30 years maintaining the Struts and J*EE sites people are putting together today in all those big institutions. Have fun, Mike ________________________________________________ Mike C. Fletcher Designer, VR Plumber, Coder http://www.vrplumber.com http://blog.vrplumber.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list