This article is written by Nathan Murthy, a staff software engineer at Tesla. The article is found at: https://medium.com/@natemurthy/all-the-things-i-hate-about-python-5c5ff5fda95e
Apparently he chose his article title as "click bait". Apparently he does not really hate Python (So he says.). His leader paragraph is: "Python is viewed as a ubiquitous programming language; however, its design limits its potential as a reliable and high performance systems language. Unfortunately, not every developer is aware of its limitations." As I currently do not have the necessary technical knowledge to properly evaluate his claims, I thought I would ask those of you who do. I have neither the knowledge or boB-hours to write a large distributed system code base, but I am curious if Python is truly limited for doing these in the ways he claims. BTW, I am not trying to start (another) heated, emotional thread. You guys do sometimes get carried away! I honestly just what to know the truth of the matters out of my continuing to learn Python. I suspect there is probably some truth in his claims, but I am not sure if he is taking things out of their proper application contexts or not. Thanks! -- boB -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list