Good programmers need to be creative, flexible (soft skills with others), critical thinkers, and problem solvers. Lacking those kinds of features makes for a rigid and terrible programmer that is near impossible to work with or code behind. Leave the ego at the door.
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Python, and dynamically typed languages in general, are known as being great for beginners. However, I feel that while they’re fun for beginners, they should only be used if you really know what you’re doing, as the code can get messy real fast without some guard rails in place (static typing being a big one).
If your function is longer than 10 statements, parts can almost always be extracted into smaller parts. If named correctly, this improves readability significantly
HELL NO! If you split that function into three, but these always have to be called in succession, you win nothing but make your code WAY harder to read/follow.
Modern PHP is great and people judging it by PHP 5 (version that's almost 20 years old) are idiots.
The amount of unqualified people is staggering beginning with those who have no university education.
Mandatory pull requests + approvals within a team are a waste of everyone's time.
Big hot take to me; especially in an organization with a large size and code high standard
I find that S-expressions are the best syntax for programming languages. And in general infix operators are inferior to either prefix or postfix notation.