> The upside being that unlike Python none of these errors are usually strong enough to be fatal to your application.
That's a great point. Each language has its domain where it excels. The reality is that 90% (or more) of all apps don't deal with the traffic scale of YouTube, the complexity of an operating system, or the mission-critical constraints of software for the F-35. For most businesses, Python is more than sufficient in 2024. At the same time, for learners, it's much easier to pick up. It's a sweet spot.
This works to me to look ok (I mean I don't look like model or Thor and I am not fat either):
1. Walk (do not use elevator, get out of bus one stop before your destination [in Europe this is like 500-1000m distance], take your girl/wife/friend/)
2. Take any chance to move or lift up anything. (Shoping? Take basket instead of cart)
3. Do "morning snack". I did 30/30/30, nowadays (I am 38 and lazy) I do 10/10/10. It means x pushups, x squats, x situps. Doesn't matter what type of pushups/squats/abdomen exercise you do or number of repetition. What matter is that you are able to do it in the morning (even after hard party) as a very first thing at least 5 days a week.
In my 23s (2008) when I started my career as a Java Developer it was Effective Java. Applying that rules and talking about them with other colleagues makes me better and self-confident developer which other noticed. That leads to better salary negotiations in the future (and my job made me most money). After 10+ years it still helps, because I work mostly in enterprise environments when maturity is way lower and at the same time nowadays lot of juniors joining java community and they are even more junior than I was back in my start of career.
For me there is no better way for your wealth building than real knowledge. Learn hard skills, nurture soft skills, work smart. Lot of investment opportunities are just gambling (with money of naive people), choose wisely.
That's a great point. Each language has its domain where it excels. The reality is that 90% (or more) of all apps don't deal with the traffic scale of YouTube, the complexity of an operating system, or the mission-critical constraints of software for the F-35. For most businesses, Python is more than sufficient in 2024. At the same time, for learners, it's much easier to pick up. It's a sweet spot.