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diekhans | 8 months ago

The article doesn't understand programmers. People will stay because they are passionate about OCaml and there are not a lot of OCaml jobs.

When hiring for a permanent position, I have the expectation that a programmer can learn a new language and environment. An OCaml programmer for a position that is python or C would be looked on very favorably. Far more attention-getting than “full-stack programmer”.

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neandrake|8 months ago

If your only professional experience is OCaml and you want to look elsewhere for work then your opportunities shrink noticeably. Especially if you're looking for a position that requires experience. It's much more digestible for a company to hire someone out of college and invest in training on tooling. But many companies won't get past the resume if a senior developer has to take more time to on-board.

diekhans|8 months ago

This is likely true for many companies. However, it is also a metric for what type of working environment it will be. I value being able to learn quickly and creativity over pre-training.

learningstud|8 months ago

The OCaml people probably know C/C++ better than most C/C++ programmers. Do you even know any of them?