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Whats your end product? Whats your goal? What are you building? Whats the company using? What gets the job done fastest? What are the companies around you using? What gets it done the with most security? This is a question I get alot, and I don't think it's the right question to ask.
English or whatever languaje your team speaks. You should be able to communicate your thoughts to your colleagues clearly.
Elixir & Rust, get any job done!
The AR-Monsters aren't being tracked. The coordinates are predetermined since the camera's follow the same coordinates every time.
Learn lua and become S class
Idk why I clicked in the video when I knew that the answer is gonna be "It depends". I think it's because these kind of videos always makes me wanna know if this person is gonna say something different than the other guys but it always end up with the same answer. Damn I'm so silly.
Besides learning the "tool for the job", the more you learn, and the longer you do (usually the latter only works if it goes alongside learning more), you'll start being able to adapt much faster to situations and being able to learn more, as you'll nail the basics down. Maybe jumping from something like machine learning into game dev, or something else, would seem "disadvantageous", but you'd still have some basics which would let you learn much faster.
An understanding of fundamentals is what a programmer needs. Understanding how Databases work. That helps you create Datamodels in your brain. The Programmer needs to grasp the real life problems, abstract and recreate those problems with Datamodels, then find a solution.
I hate Programmers in a Team who don't even know what they are programming, who needs to be held by hand for each step, where you need to tell them bit by bit what they need to do and why.
good video!
Node.js
I'd say the first thing you need to find is a goal, an objective, cause you wont learn coding without a purpose, something that will keep you going once you hit a wall, when you think it's hard. Also a goal will make you want to practice and get better.
Once you know a language than all the others are really easier since you at least know how to code in something.
Easy java shit load of money
Haskell 4 Lyfe
Haskell and f#riends are the best.
40 seconds in "Blasphemy! Bow to the js gods and repent!"
that haircut looks fresh
Can you make a short video with an interesting phrase, but in binary?
i'm shook
no one love java
I'd just start searching programming languages in any jobsite and see how many jobs pop up.
Dogs speak in binary. Lol
Depending on "to learn" I'd say Java and C++. Java because it's a very good language to learn design and engineering of software. C++ because it's just a good language to learn itself. The most "fuck yeah, it works, how cool ist that" moments I had with C++.
The language isn't so important. It's far more important to learn about the hardware, the compute pipeline, memory, compilers, data structures and algorithms. If you understand these fundamentals then you'll be able to become productive in any language in a couple of days and actually write good code. But, if I had to pick, I'd choose plain old C98. The authoritative book on C is a little over 200 pages long. Anyone can read this cover-to-cover and become expert in C. Conversely, you can study 1000 page books on C++ and still not even know 10% of the language. There is also somewhat of a movement away from object-oriented programming within the industry. Learn C and you'll have understood how to manage memory, manipulate raw pointers and program at a low level, with little abstraction above assembly. Moving onto higher-level (read slower) languages will be a walk in the park.
This is the correct answer, if anyone gives you a list of "Best" languages probably don't know what they are talking about.
If you actually want to improve, learn about design patterns, data structures and software development process like Test-driven development(TDD).
Knowing this. the software development becomes an art form.
I think enough to learn one core language and after master it, next to learn its frameworks, libraries and the more attached settings.These can be overwhelming enough for months and years.:)
C is really appealing due to its simplicity. And reading the comments here that C is "Obsolete" 😀 guys, Windows and Linux both run almost purely on C, all the software you use, uses OS APIs that have been written in C. Wanna really know whats going on ? start there.
C++> any other language;
wait bro you from utah! hell yeah!
I tell everyone to learn PHP
When they tell me they want to develop mobile games.
“It’s all a tool?” “always been”
Job market
I say if you want to be able to do any kind of development, learn C#. It's the Swiss Army Knife of languages. About the only thing I can think of that it doesn't do extremely well is device drivers and the lowest level systems programming, but not many people are interested in that.
just learn fortran.