This is probably my biggest complaint about trying to learn Python past the beginner level and into intermediate and beyond. This is also one of my strongest arguments in favor of static type systems over dynamic ones.
JackbyDev
I think venv is the best because it's built in. But I'm also not a Python dev.
No, the dependency management in Python is a nightmare. There's like a billion options for it.
Public modlogs help us fight against it, though.
One time I had a brain fart when I was reading about the United the Right rally and was confused why "national socialists" were there lol. Aren't socialists left? Then I was like "...oh. literal Nazis."
If it's protecting capitalism, wouldn't you mean when the wealth gap is too small? As in it is a driving force of the wealth gap?
Capitalism sucks for the same reason Communism sucks [...] There needs to be balance and Communism is not it.
And Capitalism is? Aight.
Gotcha. As an aside, the syntax to refer to a user is @username@instance
, for example mine is @[email protected].
Source? Sounds like an interesting read.
Why do you care if it has wifi if it's not connected to a network?
What's the difference? I rarely use Python and every time I do I have to relearn which tools are the go to ones. In Java it's a little simpler, we really just have Maven and Gradle. They have their own problems, sure, what tool doesn't, but the thing that annoys me about python is the quantity of tools. There often isn't a clear winner.
Now, to be fair to python, a lot of the ones mentioned on this post are very specifically for data science use cases and not general purpose development.