Is Spanish worth learning?

Is Spanish worth learning?
I'm native in Polish and as I've hit C2 in English I want to pick something new that will make me better suited for the European IT job market, I'm starting uni as an undergrad this year (computer science).
Spanish was the first idea that came to my mind since it's said to be very easy to learn and has a lot of speakers worldwide. On second though I realized it's spoken natively mostly in shit countries and a big portion of those who know it as their second language speaks English so it would be pointless.
Weighing this against the pros do you think I should go for it or is there some other language that would surely be better here?

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Don't learn Spanish unless you live in a majority hispanic/latino shithole.
t. califag

learn afrikaan

Por supuesto hijo de remil putas. Quien crees que va a reemplazar todos los cagadores de las calle?

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If you are going to learn a language solely for IT, then unironically learn Hindu.

Esos maricones no van a durar mucho, nosotros lla estamos aqui votando para tu govermiento.

Ni por la mas remota, austera de las casualidades vale la pena aprender espaƱol. Especialmente si eres polski.

If you want to work in Europe, learning Spanish would be a waste of time unless you wanted to work in Spain.

I would learn German or French.

>t. Spanishfag

Develop your street shitting skills if you go with that one, tho.

>72559244
Learn deutsch.
Kielbasa!

Is probably gonna be hard for you
I'm in Italy and there is a polish guy who has been living here for 8 months already and does not speak a single word yet
And its relevant because italian is similar to Spanish

learn german. you won't regret it.
sieg heil!

I learned spanish solely because I go to Mexico for December to get away from gay ass least coast winter and consume whatever time off I have left.

If you're polish, learn german

But otherwise I never use it other than to listen to unbased Puerto Ricans saying stupid shit.

I'm also a SoCal fag so it made sense to learn it in highschool.

the poorer version of silicone valley will be in a Spanish speaking county.

I find it so odd how most people are so braindead they can't hold a couple hundred words from a language and understand basic grammar within a month. I travel a lot and have no trouble holding a basic conversation about the weather, asking for food, directions, or help in German, English, Spanish, Russian, Japanese, and even mandarin Chinese now. I don't even consider myself smart, I even dropped out of high school in 9th grade and never got my GED. If a mega dipshit like me can do it why can't everyone else?

They lack the dedication user.
My perspective on things took a big turn when I realized being legitimately hardworking is by far more rare and valuable than being smart.

Unless you work in a Spanish speaking country, English should be fine. It's pretty much the lingua franca of the tech world.
>t. spic

Ditto. I mean I only practiced like 1-2 hours a day but I kept grinding each and every day no matter what like my life depended on it.

>better suited for the European IT job market
Does Spain even have an IT job market? I know there are Swedish net casinos sitting in Malta but other than that?
German would probably be better if you look for something more serious, but that's just a feeling.

Just learn french user

You could literally be the guy who communicates with the Indian team if you did this

And have to deal with all Indian contacts through out your business life? I don't know they are to deal with, but I would suspect it would be a milder version of the "don't learn Chinese" post.

The only language you should learn as a CS student or software engineer shoud be either Hindi (to talk to your overseas coworkers or watch tutorials on how to do fancy shit) or Mandarin Chinese (to talk to your future bosses).
Spanish is just as useless as Georgian, from an absolutely pragmatic perspective.

But I already gave up in life.

>practiced like 1-2 hours a day
Personally I hate learning words, just memorizing things are probably the most boring thing I know.

thats the thing tho you shouldn't have to sit there droning about how hard it is learning words. use them in sentences, talk to other people in that language. the usage will come naturally after some time.

Just make anki cards and consume compelling content lmao. It's really not too different any other skill.

Yeah, that's probably better. I just remember learning words in school (2nd and 3rd languages) by sitting and writing them over and over trying to memorize them.
Have been trying to learn Japanese nowadays though, but that's have been a low effort try with basically only Duolingo.

Ask the people on Jow Forums or /jp/'s djt thread. Maybe they might be able to give you some advice.