Replying to 790a31ec...

nostr:npub129gvast08lj986yftn7q5qlnj8yfqufxx0m33s9u5xssjm8c64rsve4kwg I don't think I agree. First, most of the languages have a lot in common. Second, if you learn different languages, you start thinking about programming beyond syntax, since you understand how something can be expressed with different syntaxes. With new languages, you also learn new patterns and ways of thinking, which makes you more flexible in problem-solving. Most programming problems do not need a deep understanding of a language, you can always google the rest.

nostr:npub1daaawaqtsktl4zcsfxtdex0zq0hwqgx0qfvew5yt6z0nercac37s7v4e50 I agree with you that you should try new languages at some point and learn from what makes them unique.

You shouldn't be the one that knows only one language.

But if you start the hopping before mastering a language, then you will never know how async programming really works behind the scene for example. You only learn the new syntax for using async.

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