+ 4

What is the future of Python?

I want to know that what is the future of Python because it is becoming popular. It is used google, Disney etc but will it continue? please upvote if you like my question

11th Nov 2017, 8:28 AM
Ayush Kumar
Ayush Kumar - avatar
10 Answers
+ 11
It's Bright 😶
11th Nov 2017, 8:39 AM
Ekansh
+ 9
it's very very bright
11th Nov 2017, 8:44 AM
᠌᠌Code X
᠌᠌Code X - avatar
+ 7
It is standard for AI
11th Nov 2017, 10:04 AM
Oma Falk
Oma Falk - avatar
+ 6
it is very very very bright
11th Nov 2017, 8:48 AM
Oma Falk
Oma Falk - avatar
+ 6
... brighter than the sun
11th Nov 2017, 9:14 AM
Oma Falk
Oma Falk - avatar
+ 6
It is really getting more useful Firstly, it is very much less of a programmer's heqdache than an average language. Secondly, it has powerful modules, frameworks, etc that stretch its capabilities. And that's power!
11th Nov 2017, 9:19 AM
👑 Prometheus 🇸🇬
👑 Prometheus 🇸🇬 - avatar
+ 6
It usually sees use in statistics, so Python,in the dJango framework, is a good back-end web tool, a good tool for making apps, etc
11th Nov 2017, 9:20 AM
👑 Prometheus 🇸🇬
👑 Prometheus 🇸🇬 - avatar
+ 1
For any programming language you have heard about, those enough "famous", it's  probably because it have lasted for a long time and probably will for the next years.  If you look for programming languages like C and Java for example, they're not new. I'm sure someone back in time have asked this same question. "Will [programming language] have a future?". Those languages are broadly adopted, many communities, a lot of developers and companies supporting it. By now, they are still "the future". Maturity is something a programming language achieves as it evolves, obviously. C and Java were a drama, but in every launch and techniques kept evolving, the language followed this normal path. If we consider Python, that appeared in the early 90's, that's 24 years of "experience". It's a long time! Python is a general-purpose programming language and it means that you can write scripts or whole applications according to your needs. That's an important to consider. The "try to master" added in your question's details could guide you. As you probably read and tried, Python is a "good to go" language. There are some goals you may ask yourself: Will software development be my craft?Is Python "just" a tool to help me accomplish something bigger?Do I have to know each Python's details to make progress in my job?Do I want to be considered a reference? The language is great as people gently answered, but your goal will say if you have to go with it or choose another programming language
12th Nov 2017, 9:09 AM
Ayush Kumar
Ayush Kumar - avatar
0
the anaconda extension :)
11th Nov 2017, 8:25 PM
Michael JR Chileshe
Michael JR Chileshe - avatar