> I've been using Python for right about 20 years now.
That's actually the biggest issue I've seen when a bit back joined a python-shop. Everyone there had mostly done python their whole careers. Fell in love with language during studies, then applied for jobs using that language. Stuck in the old ways, perhaps python felt nimble and nice 20 years ago compared to other things at the time, but with little progress (from its users) in using modern tooling it felt so arcane coming to this shop. And it wasn't the job's fault, it was a state of the art python stack, just a decade behind what other languages have.
That's actually the biggest issue I've seen when a bit back joined a python-shop. Everyone there had mostly done python their whole careers. Fell in love with language during studies, then applied for jobs using that language. Stuck in the old ways, perhaps python felt nimble and nice 20 years ago compared to other things at the time, but with little progress (from its users) in using modern tooling it felt so arcane coming to this shop. And it wasn't the job's fault, it was a state of the art python stack, just a decade behind what other languages have.