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> But in a real production environment, for real applications, you still want to avoid it because it isn't particularly easy to create robust systems for industrial use.

This is silly and seems to discount the massive Python codebases found in "real production environment"s throughout the tech industry and beyond, some of which are singlehandedly the codebases behind $1B+ ventures and, I'd wager, many of which are "robust" and fit for "industrial use" without babysitting just because they're Python.

(I get not liking a given language or its ecosystem, but I suspect I could rewrite the same reply for just about any of the top 10-ish most commonly used languages today.)



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