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What stood out to me: online bullying (dressed-up sometimes as concern/outrage) is what led to Guido stepping down.

Python is great, but it will never be perfect. But the outrage stuff, the entitlement stuff, essentially anything that happens on Twitter... Python seems like a victim of it's own success. Once it got popular, it couldn't scale the checks that might have stopped this runaway train of shit-tweets and bickering on the mailing list.

Personally I don't like a lot of the things that have happened in 3 (asyncio, type whispering, fstrings). I can't help but wonder if, again, this is due to becoming too popular too fast. I say that because aesthetically these features seem to go against the Zen of python.

May you never have users, but if you do, may they not have Twitter accounts!



What’s wrong with fstrings? I use JavaScript at my day job and leaning python for Raspberry PI projects. Fstrings looks like it’s better than .format or + concatenating + a bunch is strings. Especially large strings.


I dunno, R is also exploding in popularity but it seems to be able to manage itself really well. To the point of successfully creating an environment that attracts women and other underrepresented groups towards it.




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