Aug-25-2018, 06:09 PM
Hello,
I am brand new to Python and though I learned some basic in elementary school and a little C++ in college I am for all intents and purposes new to programming. I have a question and I would like and objective answer if possible.
I installed visual Studio Community 2017 along with the necessary Python libraries and tools because I use office and other MS tools in my day-today work and thought I might have an easier time adapting o menu layouts, etc. I have felt extremely comfortable with Visual Studio so far but it seems like no one uses it.
My question is: "Is there some fundamental reason that Visual Studio is deficient for Python and more importantly, will I eventually have problems if I continue to use it?". Since I don't know what I don't know, I just want to make sure I am not learning to use a tool that will eventually create more problems than it seems to solve now. Thanks in advance.
I am brand new to Python and though I learned some basic in elementary school and a little C++ in college I am for all intents and purposes new to programming. I have a question and I would like and objective answer if possible.
I installed visual Studio Community 2017 along with the necessary Python libraries and tools because I use office and other MS tools in my day-today work and thought I might have an easier time adapting o menu layouts, etc. I have felt extremely comfortable with Visual Studio so far but it seems like no one uses it.
My question is: "Is there some fundamental reason that Visual Studio is deficient for Python and more importantly, will I eventually have problems if I continue to use it?". Since I don't know what I don't know, I just want to make sure I am not learning to use a tool that will eventually create more problems than it seems to solve now. Thanks in advance.