How your company think about python?
Anthony_Barker
anthony_barker at hotmail.com
Mon Aug 19 21:19:15 EDT 2002
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Mon Aug 19 21:19:15 EDT 2002
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> From: d2002xx <d2002xx at myrealbox.com> > > I've posted a similiar message in comp.lang.java.advocacy, just for > > curious, but it seems that most people don't know about python... > Customers I have consulted for (Multi-nationals Banks mostly) haven't heard about it. I explain it as a Perl that you can more easily read and maintain. Many unix system administrators have invested a lot of time trying to gronk perl - and so resist moving to a "batteries included" language. I had to fight to have the interpreter installed on some servers - and so ended up using "freeze" or whatever to hide what it was made with. That said - I think that Linux may be one of the driving forces for python. Every Linux server has the python interpreter - much like pretty much any unix (Sun/AIX etc)installation has perl right now. I found python a "secret weapon" to impress clients with speed of code delivery... Anthony
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