Apple just annouced Swift Playground which is designed for the coding education for non-developers. I don't have experience coding in the Swift, but it seems like a progressive thinking to teach coding skills to ordinary people. so /g/, do you think that the Swift is appropriate language to achieve the educational goal that people actually make their own programs and use it in their real life?
>implying Queen TayTay has anything to do with the development of Swift programming language.
Look at all these people who give a fuck:
>>55062903
Swift is proprietary shit thats being aggressively marketed by Apple to make them seem like saviours by making an increibly high-level language "accessible" to anyone and everyone, when in reality Python is much more superior.
>>55063234
Try writing performant python and get back to me.
>>55063347
You actually like this Swift shit?
>>55063234
I know that Apple is actually a marketing-oriented company for the developers and /g/entoomans. But, for ordinary people, They even don't know how to make sequential file names or fundamental glob functions; you can easily find some people who change file names one and one, while that job can be done by few lines of the batch script. Apple introduce the daily life coding to ordinary people, and it might lever average computing skill upto werks-on-my-machinel-level batch scripting. You might know that the programming language Pascal was aiming this.
>>55063584
>/g/entoomans -> /g/entoomen
>>55063347
>what is julia