

English. I can go to the store and buy a sandwich for $8.99 all in one sentence, but splitting it on periods gives you two sentences.
English. I can go to the store and buy a sandwich for $8.99 all in one sentence, but splitting it on periods gives you two sentences.
Another couple missing:
A fun language to learn regarding these is Hawaiian, where the language uses a-class and o-class rather than masculine and feminine, and which you use is largely based on how much control you have over it.
It was mentioned in the notes for 1.84.0 that they began migrating to it. They might be doing it without an edition change if it’s backwards compatible (or if the incompatibilities are considered bugs).
Usually the serialization/deserialization code, I keep with the model. The part where a file or whatever comes in, I leave that to the caller to decide on. In other words, the model knows how to serialize and deserialize itself, but not where it’s being serialized to or deserialized from.
Then again, in C#, it’s usually just a couple attributes on my model, and in Rust, it’s usually just a couple derives. It’s rare I actually write much, if any, serialization logic by hand.
If you’re fine with breaking changes now and then, then yes absolutely. I use it everywhere, and it’s been a huge boost in productivity for me.
Not only this, but C# has diverged enough from Java that anything but the absolute basics isn’t going to help much with C#.
There is a book bundle on Humble Bundle right now that goes into security and hacking, if that’s what you’re interested in.
You’re unlikely to receive any support, at least publicly, for how to do anything potentially illegal. I would recommend just not doing anything illegal or unethical anyway. If you’re interested from a security perspective, find a cybersec community, and you may get more support there.
Ironically, many languages that violate these rules are spoken in the US natively. People in the US just like to forget that there are other natively spoken languages (spoken since before English was introduced to the continent even).