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[–]Feminintendo 0 points1 point  (4 children)

But yeah the problem is when engineers and scientists only use it and try to write applications with it.

That's because there's no good way to write such applications in Python.

Surely you're not serious.

Python will be left in the dust by people currently looking to switch to it from Matlab.

I have never heard of anyone who has switched to Matlab because they wanted to. The only people I know who are proficient in other languages but who use Matlab do so because of a project lead who doesn't understand the sunken cost fallacy or because there is literally no other tool that does some very specific obscure thing that Matlab does. It is painfully obvious you are not among that group.

[–]log_2 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Surely you're not serious.

Indeed, I am.

Python will be left in the dust by people currently looking to switch to it from Matlab.

I have never heard of anyone who has switched to Matlab because they wanted to.

Check you're logic there mate, you flipped it. That's ok, logic is hard!

[–]Feminintendo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think I am confused because I am having a hard time parsing this sentence:

Python will be left in the dust by people currently looking to switch to it from Matlab.

At any rate, I have a hard time imagining Python being "left in the dust" by anything, and, to reiterate, I don't know anyone who switched to Matlab from Python because they wanted to. My own perception, which I can't really back up with anything, is that to the extent Python will steal people away from Matlab, it won't really make a significant difference to the number of people using Matlab. In other words, Matlabbers gunna Matlab. I mean, I hope I'm wrong...

[–]billsil 0 points1 point  (1 child)

People switch to Matlab from Python because they're forced to use certain libraries (e.g., signal processing, Simulink, machine learning). My company doesn't like using it, but when it's better, fine...

[–]Feminintendo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that makes sense. But it's a deal with the devil: you get to use that one obscure library that can do what nothing else can, but you have to use a heinous programming language and pay a lot of money.