I think that you don't need to focus only in a language, but more on programming principles.
You can use any languages for so different things actually, there is always a tool that will help you to run your code somewhere you need. Of course some languages are more useful for some goals. I think you definitely can keep learning python but don't stay just on it, jump into other languages, technologies, everything is going so fast, you need to learn new technologies/things every x days/months/years. I think nothing is defined, you just need to find the right technology for your current project and read a lot. :)
I know that I didn't respond to your question actually, maybe someone else who has some experiences with python will respond you better.
Good luck.
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I think that you don't need to focus only in a language, but more on programming principles.
You can use any languages for so different things actually, there is always a tool that will help you to run your code somewhere you need. Of course some languages are more useful for some goals. I think you definitely can keep learning python but don't stay just on it, jump into other languages, technologies, everything is going so fast, you need to learn new technologies/things every x days/months/years. I think nothing is defined, you just need to find the right technology for your current project and read a lot. :)
I know that I didn't respond to your question actually, maybe someone else who has some experiences with python will respond you better.
Good luck.