Devil’s advocate: if the problems were could be solved with relatively simple programming, why aren’t why they solved already?
danzania
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danzania@infosec.pubto
Linux@programming.dev•Bluestar Linux: Arch Power, User-Friendly Polish
17·8 months agoBut is it friendly to users? The future is now.
danzania@infosec.pubto
Linux@programming.dev•Linux has over 6% of the desktop market? Yes, you read that right - here's how
5·8 months agoI first tried Ubuntu then switched to pop os and haven’t looked back. Feels great to be free of MS.
danzania@infosec.pubto
Python@programming.dev•Opinions: Do you feel Python is a more object-oriented or procedural language?
1·9 months agoYeah that’s a great point – the dataframe is in a sense a class or object standardized for data analysis. Its flexibility (like being able to store arrays or dicts even) obviates the need in most cases for a user-written class.
danzania@infosec.pubto
Python@programming.dev•Opinions: Do you feel Python is a more object-oriented or procedural language?
11·9 months agoFor me it depends on the use case. If I’m designing something with an interface for someone downstream to use, I’ll usually define (data)classes even if I have a functional interface.
For data science/modeling/notebooks I usually wouldn’t define classes.
I think it also depends on your team; if everyone else is a functional programmer and you’re writing classes or vice versa, this will undoubtedly create frictions.
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I landed and Pop OS and love it.