Noah, i also agree completelly each person works differently, of course! :-) (maybe that's why i got concerned about politeness on pasting code here, which i didn't know how far is it needed or not...) - you may be from the academic world, and i'm hobbyst, academically from graphic design area (and still with some bad habits from the ansi-basic 80's coding...)
When compaired with Perl, Ruby and Java, Python for me is maybe the very best language i found - it's clean, and also works fine as script language on Gimp, Inkscape, Blender, Scribus, etc., what is truly awesome for me... - and as well, Python came installed on all Linux and MacOS-X, what is awesome as well... what made me becoming so surprised with Python is i could code there in the same way i used to code on sdlBasic and wxBasic, and these codes worked fine! :-) - you know, a mere graphic designer with a hobbyst taste about coding, being able to code scripts for Gimp and so on (the python version of the .ai importer from Inkscape is mine, as well the Gnome menu converter for Fluxbox, for example... :-p ), even some small converters... why i shoutd stop coding on Python, you know... ? thanks! :-) ------------------------ On Mon, Jul 28, 2008 at 12:38 PM, Noah Kantrowitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Paulo Silva wrote: >> >> Stop right now? oh please, just now when i were getting so happy on >> trying to learn it? what a stimulation from the open-source world... >> :-(((((( >> >> (i really wanted only to focus in the solutions of doubts like mine >> one...) > > If Python doesn't match the way you work, I doubt you will enjoy it. Not > every tool is right for every job, and each person works differently. Thats > all. > > --Noah > >