Kent Johnson wrote:
>> At least in the Bay Area, the jobmarket for Python programmers is wild,
>> right now -- firms such as Google, Pixar, BitTorrent, IronPort, etc,
>> etc, all hungry for Pythonistas -- BayPIGgies mailing list bitching over
>> too many job-offer posts, and the nuisance of all th
> So switch jobs -- it's a good time.
If it were that easy I would.. However, I have family commitments
keeping me in Yorkshire (UK) (as well as the fact that I really like
the area!), and the jobs in the area are all Java, .NET (predominantly
C#) and C++.
Always on the lookout for Python work th
Alex Martelli napisał(a):
> At least in the Bay Area, the jobmarket for Python programmers is wild,
> right now -- firms such as Google, Pixar, BitTorrent, IronPort, etc,
> etc, all hungry for Pythonistas -- BayPIGgies mailing list bitching over
> too many job-offer posts, and the nuisance of all
Alex Martelli wrote:
> Ant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Python ruined my life.
Python ruined me for Java coding too.
> At least in the Bay Area, the jobmarket for Python programmers is wild,
> right now -- firms such as Google, Pixar, BitTorrent, IronPort, etc,
> etc, all hungry for Pythonist
Ant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Python ruined my life.
>
> I am a Java programmer by profession, and ever since learning Python, I
> find it a real chore to open Eclipse and write Java code (or worse -
> the XML config files that seem to glue J2EE together). And while I
> spend some of my spare
I know this isn't comp.lang.java but I can't resist...
Jarek Zgoda wrote:
> Going from Python to Java (as it's in my case) is real pain I wish
> nobody to feel... Even with multi-million support for Java from giants
> like Sun, IBM or Oracle, I find it much easier to gain full control over
> m
Yes, and then you have to answer Java/C/C++ job/contracts opening knowing
real well the mistake they're making ... as well as you are for
answering ;-)
Ant wrote:
> Python ruined my life.
>
> I am a Java programmer by profession, and ever since learning Python, I
> find it a real chore to open
Python ruined my life.
I am a Java programmer by profession, and ever since learning Python, I
find it a real chore to open Eclipse and write Java code (or worse -
the XML config files that seem to glue J2EE together). And while I
spend some of my spare time liberated by Python, I spend 10 times a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] napisał(a):
> I wanted to thank those members of the Python community that took the
> time to answer my questions about interfaces and plug-ins in Python. I
> have discovered that Python is a very powerful language, and one that I
> look forward to using for Linux development. I
Well then I'll also take the opportunity to put in my 2 cts. In the
past I've tried several times to master Java as I at that time
understood it to be *the* hype wrt programming but never really
succeeded in getting beyond "Hello world" :D. Also got bored with all
the technicalities pretty much eac
Me too. I feel like I've been living under a rock. Did all this just
happen in the last few years?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I wanted to thank those members of the Python community that took the
time to answer my questions about interfaces and plug-ins in Python. I
have discovered that Python is a very powerful language, and one that I
look forward to using for Linux development. I have found the support
for Python much
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