You are aware some of us are in labs w/ certain habits (Matlab is default & push back to try other things) & might not have much choice?
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Replying to @RemiGau @DailyPedantry and
That's unfortunate. But that doesn't necessarily stop you from exploring other languages on your own.
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Replying to @neurobongo @DailyPedantry and
In theory, yes. But there are only so many uphill battles one can fight. "learning python" is on to-do list. Hopefully will get to it soon.
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Replying to @RemiGau @DailyPedantry and
Good luck. Only so many hours in the day, but thankfully learning better tools can sometimes win some of those hours back in long run...
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Replying to @RemiGau @neurobongo and
Can only praise you, Remi, and agree with you, David. Try as much as poss to compensate for bad lab-level habits until you can "escape".
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Replying to @o_guest @neurobongo and
Am doing that. Though tbh there are some good habits too. But with time we take those for granted and only tend to see the bad ones.
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Replying to @RemiGau @neurobongo and
All lab cultures have good and bad habits. From my own personal experience though, I've been in labs where the bad far outweighed the good.
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As someone in “industry” the exact same applies no matter where you are… don’t get discouraged, do what you can to improve yourself.
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Replying to @DailyPedantry @RemiGau and
Absolutely. Also just because something is bad doesn't mean you can't learn from it. Some of my best life lessons have been in times where
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my previous PI was being his worst. Like when he lost his shit because I resigned. 
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