ā¦#kp4v2wa) @abucci I tried to learn Scala when it was trendy (I think it was when Twitter switched from Ruby to Scala), but the lack of documentation in Play Framework was a roadblock (I kind of hate Jā¦
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ā¦#kp4v2wa) @prologic I like Python so much, but the performance is horrible for a big scale. I was betting on Nim but doesn't have all the benefits you mentioned before. I think, and a trust you, that ā¦
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ā¦#kp4v2wa) It depends what you want to do , I use different languages for different use case :
- Python is good for AI and small Linux management things
- Java is good for big data pipelines
- Go is gā¦
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(#kp4v2wa) Btw Go is also good for networking. And
C# has a very beautiful reflection library I still prefer go but I may think in C# if I have to deal with a lot of reflection.
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(#kp4v2wa) @tkanos I agree! I like C# a lot, but I'd go with Script languages (Python, JS, PHP) for quick prototypes. Even working JSON with recent versions of C# takes a lot of Dev time.
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ā¦#kp4v2wa) As a user of programs, it makes me groan to see a program written in anything but C or C++. In just about every other language, it's too easy to manage dependencies, and two problems arise.
ā¦
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ā¦#kp4v2wa) @mckinley Agree on "micro dependencies" (NodeJS / NPM ecosystem is _quite_ guilty of this); however I think this comes down to some level of "good practise" and "good code hygiene" -- I don'ā¦
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