I can agree with your comment. What's missing is the possibility to, you know, just jump ship.
You might not be married to Python but it sure looks that way for many others. I switched main languages no less than 4 times in my career and each time it was an objective improvement.
The thing that kind of makes me look down on other programmers is them refusing to move on.
For nuance and to address your point, I have worked with PHP for about six years, .NET for five, C++ for two, and Python for seven.
I still dabble in all of them. Who knows when I will move on to the next. Rust looks nice. I tried go.
But they do not yet provide any of the tools/libraries I need for my work. That's how I've always selected my programming language.
So I would first need to invent the universe before I can create valuable things. Instead I will just wait until their ecosystems mature a little more.
I will end the discussion here though. Thanks for the response!
You might not be married to Python but it sure looks that way for many others. I switched main languages no less than 4 times in my career and each time it was an objective improvement.
The thing that kind of makes me look down on other programmers is them refusing to move on.