> >> suppose I now want the app natively on my phone (because that's all
> >> the rage).  It's an iPhone.  Oh.  Apple doesn't support Python.
> >> Okay, rewrite the works, including business logic, in Objective C.
> >> Now I want it on my android phone. 
> > 
> > Those are gadgets, not work tools.
> 
> As a professional programmer I'm afraid you're going to soon find
> yourself out of work if you really see things that way.

As a "domain expert", I come from the end-user side of "enterprise
applications" and again; those are not tools for screenworkers to get
actual work done, but consumer crap for fad-driven gadget-addicted kids
(regardless of nominal age).

> I honestly used to feel that way about graphical user interfaces.

A GUI that can not be used without taking the ten fingers off the
keyboard is indeed entirely unusable for any half-proficient
screenworker. And anyone doing actual productive screenwork every day
for more than just a few months will inevitably (have to) get proficient
(unless completely braindead).

Sincerely,

Wolfgang
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