I mean nice, but anyone with half a brain will take a look at the code and decide for their own if they're a decent coder
Also there's star graphs over time that show the growth of a project
I mean nice, but anyone with half a brain will take a look at the code and decide for their own if they're a decent coder
Also there's star graphs over time that show the growth of a project
I very much doubt that you can run old code unchanged on newer Java versions. Especially not without dependency updates
This problem is not exclusive to Python
who needs a standard when you are the standard /s
At least I can mostly opt out there. Or use Linux
Some countries are shit with titles though and the technical ladder ends at senior. To go higher means being coming a team leader in those countries.
/thread
At some point climbing the career ladder just means taking on vastly different responsibilities. If all you want to do is code, there isn't always the career ladder you might know from big tech. It just ends at senior.
Which doesn't mean that your career end there, your experience is just measured by years of experience and what you achieved, not some title.
I can't confirm the point about autocompletion with Python. When using strictly typed Python (mypy), the suggestions are just as good
Do, it really fixes the web experience
One great way is browsing an instance's communities, as the instances often have a specific theme as well these days. Like programming.dev
I thought Rust was fast
This sounds a lot like someone who is already in a relationship
That sounds a bit harsh. As a guy I can tell you it can simply be due to long distance. If there is little perspective to see each other regularly it's easy to lose interest, especially if it's not your first relationship and you haven't spent that much time together to begin with like in this case
Metal and plastic is easy, controlling cloth is hard