Much agreed. Verilog/VHDL are simply not programming languages. They are Hardware Description Languages. They describe parallel components that will actually be "wired" together.
My advice if you are a programmer or computer scientist and you get tasked with writing Verilog of VHDL "code" you need to be able to explain the difference -- You've just been offered a job as a hardware designer and engineer. Having spent 5 years doing hardware engineering and a lot longer doing software consulting I can say it's an entirely different set of skills if not an entirely different career path.
My advice if you are a programmer or computer scientist and you get tasked with writing Verilog of VHDL "code" you need to be able to explain the difference -- You've just been offered a job as a hardware designer and engineer. Having spent 5 years doing hardware engineering and a lot longer doing software consulting I can say it's an entirely different set of skills if not an entirely different career path.