• theneverfox@pawb.social
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    1 year ago

    Damn… That list sounds terrifying. I’m working on a legacy code base in VB (although I finally have time to try out this c# converter to start the slow march out of depreciation), and 8 months later I still feel gross with VB. I’m pretty sure VB is uniquely horrible because of the inconsistency. .

    I’ve heard good things about pascal and lisp… But lisp syntax also makes me irrationally uncomfortable

    I did prolog as well in an elective, that was a weird and interesting language. It’s not very practical, but it was fun. Plus graph theory is one of the weird maths that pops up everywhere, maybe one day I’ll find an excuse to try to use it for something

    So it sounds like you had even more than me, I’m now wondering why even my relatively young co-workers all seemed to specialize so hard straight out of school

    What did you end up working in? Did you specialize, or keep up with the language juggling?

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Picking up languages is quite easy, you just have to learn it. Turns out nowadays I mostly work with SQL (it’s on the required list too, I just forgot about it) and C#. Learning new paradigms is harder, but there aren’t that many of those.

      I’m now wondering why even my relatively young co-workers all seemed to specialize so hard straight out of school

      That’s imposed by the job market, not natural thing to exist. In fact, it’s very much unnatural.