John Salerno wrote: > It's a nice thought that a person can earn a living programming with > Python, which is fun enough to use just for its own sake. But for > someone like me (i.e. no programming experience) it's always a little > disheartening to see that most (if not all) job descriptions that ask > for Python still require some C/C++ or other language knowledge. I > suppose this isn't an issue if you studied CS in college, because you > would have been exposed to many languages. > > But what if you are an expert Python program and have zero clue about > other languages? Can you still earn a living that way, or do most/all > companies require multiple language proficiency? > > (I suppose this isn't exactly a Python problem, either. I'm sure even > companies that don't use Python still use multiple languages. Maybe it > isn't a good idea to focus entirely on a single language, depending on > the job at hand.)
hmm, I don't know, but I can't imagine someone being a Python (or any other language) wizard, without knowing other languages. Does that even exist? Regards, antoine -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list