I'm sorry, but I'm writing this response without reading all the previous comments, but with almost 600 directly to it and more comments to a comment I hope it's understandable.
However I did read a good portion of them and I'm confused...I thought Python doesn't use types everything is an object according to their documentation.
Now for my 2 cents, if you don't care, don't read it... a lot of the comments aren't based on facts but opinions and a lack of understanding of the actual language, funny that I write that after my previous sentence huh? :) . Every language has goods and bads, don't think as someone who as a Python programmer or C programmer, just a programmer and use the best tool for the task you're trying to complete. If you've been programming for awhile you should have used a dozen different languages at some point. Don't focus on what the language can do but understanding the underlying concepts and then you can easily use the one that makes the most sense for that project.
However I did read a good portion of them and I'm confused...I thought Python doesn't use types everything is an object according to their documentation.
Now for my 2 cents, if you don't care, don't read it... a lot of the comments aren't based on facts but opinions and a lack of understanding of the actual language, funny that I write that after my previous sentence huh? :) . Every language has goods and bads, don't think as someone who as a Python programmer or C programmer, just a programmer and use the best tool for the task you're trying to complete. If you've been programming for awhile you should have used a dozen different languages at some point. Don't focus on what the language can do but understanding the underlying concepts and then you can easily use the one that makes the most sense for that project.