Akhmed Kurbanov

Akhmed Kairovich Kurbanov (Russian: Ахмед Каирович Курбанов; born 22 April 1986) is a former Russian professional football player.

Akhmed Kurbanov
Personal information
Full name Akhmed Kairovich Kurbanov
Date of birth (1986-04-22) 22 April 1986
Place of birth Makhachkala, Russian SFSR
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position(s) Forward/Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2001–2004 FC Anzhi Makhachkala 22 (1)
2005 FC Tekstilshchik Kamyshin 4 (0)
2006 FC Dagdizel Kaspiysk 7 (0)
2008 FC Arsenal Tula (amateur)
2008–2012 FC Dagdizel Kaspiysk 87 (3)
2012 FC Mashuk-KMV Pyatigorsk 17 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Club career

He made his Russian Football National League debut for FC Anzhi Makhachkala on 1 November 2003 in a game against PFC Spartak Nalchik. He also played for Anzhi in the FNL in the following season.

gollark: As well as having special casing for stuff, it often is just pointlessly hostile to abstracting anything:- lol no generics- you literally cannot define a well-typed `min`/`max` function (like Lua has). Unless you do something weird like... implement an interface for that on all the builtin number types, and I don't know if it would let you do that.- no map/filter/reduce stuff- `if err != nil { return err }`- the recommended way to map over an array in parallel, if I remember right, is to run a goroutine for every element which does whatever task you want then adds the result to a shared "output" array, and use a WaitGroup thingy to wait for all the goroutines. This is a lot of boilerplate.
gollark: It also does have the whole "anything which implements the right functions implements an interface" thing, which seems very horrible to me as a random change somewhere could cause compile errors with no good explanation.
gollark: - `make`/`new` are basically magic- `range` is magic too - what it does depends on the number of return values you use, or something. Also, IIRC user-defined types can't implement it- Generics are available for all of, what, three builtin types? Maps, slices and channels, if I remember right.- `select` also only works with the built-in channels- Constants: they can only be something like four types, and what even is `iota` doing- The multiple return values can't be used as tuples or anything. You can, as far as I'm aware, only return two (or, well, more than one) things at once, or bind two returns to two variables, nothing else.- no operator overloading- it *kind of* has exceptions (panic/recover), presumably because they realized not having any would be very annoying, but they're not very usable- whether reading from a channel is blocking also depends how many return values you use because of course
gollark: What, you mean no it doesn't have weird special cases everywhere?
gollark: It pretends to be "simple", but it isn't because there are bizarre special cases everywhere to make stuff appear to work.


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