Pasta is delicious. Choice is here to stay.

I think frustrated people tend to overestimate the cost of reading a 
600-page book (the documentation) or installing 17 dependencies 
(automatically). It will pay off to understand the tools you are using over 
the lifetime of a significant application; if jumping between projects is 
too hard and too necessary, you should try an IDE. Jump-to-definition is 
life-changing.

My biggest challenge with Python web library choice was that I had to learn 
to evaluate many projects quickly based totally not on technical merit since 
I had never used that category of software before: appearance of web page, 
apparent quality of documentation, whether they have been extracted from an 
application or developed out of an imagined need, etc. Unfortunately cruel 
souls publish trojan horse projects that have nice trappings but are 
actually traps for anyone foolish enough to actually use them.

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