[nycphp-talk] Is it worth learning Python too?
Mitch Pirtle
mitchy at spacemonkeylabs.com
Wed Apr 14 12:51:47 EDT 2004
jon baer wrote:
>Also, from a practical standpoint, the more skills you have, the more
>hireable you are. When an employer is looking for two people with PHP
>and Python skills, and he's already found the PHP coder, you still
>have a shot at getting the gig.
><<<
>
>Point well taken ... although I always find people hesitant to hire the
>person knowing 10% ASP, 10% JSP, 10% HTML, 10% Python, 10% C, 10% PHP, 10%
>XML, 10% DHTML, 10% SQL 10% Come in on time. :-) Looks like the average
>request these days ...
>
Whoah, I gotta debate that one.
(pulls up a stool)
I started as a 'jack of all trades, master of none. And not just
languages, but jobs too - hardware engineer, warehouse inventory
management, truck driver for manufacturing, graphics artist/animator,
accounting systems migration, information security, business
development... Fifteen years later I'm a 'jack of all trades, master of
many'. And when many are looking for work, I'm cutting projects loose
for lack of time. I credit this on my being both broad AND deep. I
wouldn't change a thing if I could, as it has been a remarkable,
exciting, thrill-ride of a career!
Remember the kid who carried his new skateboard around all summer
because he didn't want anyone to see how bad he sucked at it? He ended
up giving it to a buddy, as he never spent enough time on the thing to
ever pull that 'backside roast beef' that he always wanted.
Don't lose the skateboard, man!!! Besides, the scabs don't last long...
-- Mitch
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