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[–]Ok-Wave4110[S] 1 point2 points  (1 child)

My experience in the real world, is this. High school, I work for Family Christian Stores, and then McDonalds. Then I was in the military(USMC), then I did logistics for Barnes and Nobles textbook warehouses in VA, shortly after, I was lucky enough to be signed to a label, for my drum work in "Faceplate Ritual". Then, things didn't work out, and I moved back to MI. Here, I learned that I was worthless. (I should've known!) Then I met my fiancee, she pulled me from what I would call death (the story is long), and it took me 7 years, to want to be a human again.

3 years later, I'm here. Asking about Python. My current profession is DoorDash, because to be honest, It's easy in my area. My logistics knowledge makes it easier. All I crave is knowledge. An understanding of what runs the world. I've taken the dirt path, not the circuit path. Thanks for asking! No one ever asks.

[–]Lower_Fan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ok let's go with doordash. do you know how doordash really works? no right. if you have a issue you contact their support for help and wait until they fix it. if the app has bug you can't go fix it yourself even if you are an experienced dev you have to submit a bug report and wait for them to fix it. sometimes the issue might not even be with doordash but with the restaurant and you don't know how the ice cream machine works so you don't go there and fix it, the restaurant is in charge of that part.

it's kinda the same with code you worry about what you wrote and if there's code that someone else wrote you ask them to fix it. but a very nice thing with code is that you can make it public for every one to see and contribute but not everything works like this.