by xfce » 27 Jun 2021, 21:01
Rothaon wrote: ↑23 Jun 2021, 21:00
Programmer <3
Welcome! What do you like programming in? I'm sure we've already covered a few languages :')
My favorite languages are C, C++, Python, Go, and Scheme.
It's my nice little spice rack of languages that I prefer for different situations.
I work with other languages when I need to. I'm willing to play ball with other languages when they make sense, or I'm contributing to a project.
I also like learning new languages to see how they are good at approaching problems. Like I quite like the way how Clojure uses maps/dictionaries/hash-tables as a replacement for structs. It ends up emphasizing the implicit optional data, rather then in like Swift where you have to explicitly deal with optionals.
A language that I might look into next is Erlang. It's a functional language that has the ability to scale across computers very easily. It also has an interesting mindset around "letting it crash" rather than recovering from errors.
[quote=Rothaon post_id=3201 time=1624482047 user_id=827]
Programmer <3
Welcome! What do you like programming in? I'm sure we've already covered a few languages :')
[/quote]
My favorite languages are C, C++, Python, Go, and Scheme.
It's my nice little spice rack of languages that I prefer for different situations.
I work with other languages when I need to. I'm willing to play ball with other languages when they make sense, or I'm contributing to a project.
I also like learning new languages to see how they are good at approaching problems. Like I quite like the way how Clojure uses maps/dictionaries/hash-tables as a replacement for structs. It ends up emphasizing the implicit optional data, rather then in like Swift where you have to explicitly deal with optionals.
A language that I might look into next is Erlang. It's a functional language that has the ability to scale across computers very easily. It also has an interesting mindset around "letting it crash" rather than recovering from errors.