Coding Meme Or Noth - Definitive Thread Edition

its the closest thing to nigger language so easier to understand for niggers

I understand the appeal, it must be nice being indoors all day, I'd probably make a lot more if I had done that years ago

I do sketchy non union construction work for $20 an hour, and Its not great

But I don't think I'd want a job that couldn't be done by someone else in a different country for half price

My job gets done by someone from a different country, in my country and he gets paid half price.

Some of those Mexicans maybe make more than me if they own their business. And that's not to hate on the Mexicans I like working with Mexicans, y'all some cheeky fuckers

But I personally know some rather uninfatuating people learning to code right now because it's a meme. If that's the Calibre of individual who works in that field I'll stay with the Mexicans

Cheers keyboard boi, get your programming socks.

Python is glue. You use it to bind more solid blocks of code ( i.e. libraries written in C or Fortran ) together. Just don't try to make a cabinet literally out of glue and you'll be OK.

>MuH c0dE
>C00DER
>weeb gaymers

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this

I've been programming since I was a kid. The truth is it's like every other trade, skill or profession. The more you do it, the better you are, the more demand there'll be for you.
There is a very very large difference between people who code for fun/interest all the time and people who went to school and only program at work.
Programming is a wide field with lots of possible specializations, same as many other fields. It will continue to evolve just like other fields. Highest level skill areas have overlaps with other fields, like system design. But those high level areas require knowledge and experience in whatever field(s) you're doing it for.
My point is no matter what you do, programming or not, as long as you pick a skillset that doesn't completely disappear, you'll be capable of remaining in demand.
The most important part by far is pick something you enjoy enough to want to keep getting better at aspects of forever, whether it's programming or not.
If your goal isn't career but just to be comfortable, you'll probably stop trying to improve after a while so itll matter less to you.

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Python is fast to develop, and fast enough to execute. My time is more valuable than (reasonable) runtimes. have thousands upon thousands of LoC that were one-off thrown together throw-aways that are now in "production" use by most of my team.

Yes it's a good career, at least in Canada. I have a masters in Chemistry and it was pretty shit. Took months of applying to get an interview for bad pay. I self taught code for 3 months and fucking suck at it. I just got hired for 72k a year. I applied to jobs for one weekend, got 3 interviews and 2 offers. The oversaturated thing is complete bullshit from my experience.

Almost all code in production is to some degree like that. Producing "good" code is prohibitively expensive, both from personal experience and what I've read. I recall the code for some RTOS used from flight control software in aviation cost ~$1000 per LOC to audit for correctness.