Haskell is great. I remember trying to learn Lisp but quitting because it was a worthless pile of shit with stupid syntax.
I dismissed all functional programming until I decided to try out Haskell. It is pure programming bliss and I strongly recommend everyone become proficient in it.
Lisp is great. I remember trying to learn Haskell but quitting because it was a worthless pile of shit with stupid syntax.
I dismissed all homoiconic programming until I decided to try out Lisp. It is pure programming bliss and I strongly recommend everyone become proficient in it.
>>1
That is a question you could have answered yourself if you would self-reflected on it. Of course yes. You are asking:
Will learning certain _variations or methodologies of a job_ make you a [more versatile] _Professional of said Job_ by forcing you or allowing you to do things in a different way?
Is that not what we all do to survive: experiment things until we get the most profitable method to achieve something‽