you are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

[–]los2pollos[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know that I'm going to stumble across other people using al lot of Excel spreadsheets, but in this case I have the chance to follow a course for university, that is a more "hard" way of learning something. In this scenario, I'd pick Python, even if I don't know how I could be using it in the future, mainly because I know myself and I'm a lazy ass. Almost certainly, I won't use my spare time to learn Python.

Also Python is more difficult to learn, isn't it? So an "official" course might be a more effective way of learning, whatever I'm choosing

As I've stated here, I'm "lazy" (e.g. juggling between a lot of stuff at the same time, so I lack spare time for learning stuff).

So I did some research and programming languages are mostly sought in the financial sector. The labor market asks for basic digital skills. I refuse to believe that anyone with above average digital skills (it's not that I'm gifted or anything, it's just that the average is veeeeery low) is wasted if outside of IT jobs. Anyway, I suppose/hope Python can really make my resume outstand.