Python, I think, has n number of ways of doing the same thing while Ruby's everything is object approach forces you down a single approach. So while reading ruby code, you usually don't have to shift your mental model…
> A reminder that pretty much no lorry driver in india knows English. It would be rare to find a lorry driver who can converse in English but most of them would know the words "Horn, OK, Please". Thye aren't obscure…
If you read my comment carefully, I understand that and I know how it happens around the world. But I personally would prefer to sometimes hear a horn rather than having to drive behind a slowest moving truck for hours…
I agree and people are exeggerating the usage of horns more than it actually is. > there's absolutely no need But one use of horn that I found useful in India was to overtake on 2-lane hilly road. Now theoretically you…
Python, I think, has n number of ways of doing the same thing while Ruby's everything is object approach forces you down a single approach. So while reading ruby code, you usually don't have to shift your mental model…
> A reminder that pretty much no lorry driver in india knows English. It would be rare to find a lorry driver who can converse in English but most of them would know the words "Horn, OK, Please". Thye aren't obscure…
If you read my comment carefully, I understand that and I know how it happens around the world. But I personally would prefer to sometimes hear a horn rather than having to drive behind a slowest moving truck for hours…
I agree and people are exeggerating the usage of horns more than it actually is. > there's absolutely no need But one use of horn that I found useful in India was to overtake on 2-lane hilly road. Now theoretically you…