Language?
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
It depends on what branch you are looking at. In my yard the branch over the power line... Embedded: C, C++ and someday, maybe Rust.. Web: C#, Javascript Desktop: C#, Java
I don't think before I open my mouth, I like to be as surprised a everyone else. PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.3.0 JaxCoder.com Latest Article: SimpleWizardUpdate
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
Slow Eddie wrote:
I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone?
Everywhere is different. The best way to research this is to watch the job market where you live / want to work. It won't take long to work out what employers are looking for.
Graeme
"I fear not the man who has practiced ten thousand kicks one time, but I fear the man that has practiced one kick ten thousand times!" - Bruce Lee
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
IMHO, it is better to be language-agnostic and solution-oriented. Language details can always be filled up. For example, last week, I assisted a student with his Java assignment, though I had worked in Java only 20 years ago. Concepts of class, object, array, list, dictionary, program flow, etc. are the same in all OO languages, isn't it?
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
You'll need "two languages" then ... one for the "employer"; and one for when you want to work for yourself. (The "end user" doesn't care about "languages")
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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It depends on what branch you are looking at. In my yard the branch over the power line... Embedded: C, C++ and someday, maybe Rust.. Web: C#, Javascript Desktop: C#, Java
I don't think before I open my mouth, I like to be as surprised a everyone else. PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.3.0 JaxCoder.com Latest Article: SimpleWizardUpdate
Thanks. Good information. I appreciate it. My Branch was the Navy... Crossed the Atlantic, Pacific, and Mediterranean, but not my power lines. :-D
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IMHO, it is better to be language-agnostic and solution-oriented. Language details can always be filled up. For example, last week, I assisted a student with his Java assignment, though I had worked in Java only 20 years ago. Concepts of class, object, array, list, dictionary, program flow, etc. are the same in all OO languages, isn't it?
I get that. However when one is looking for a job like me, it is what the employers want. :sigh:
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IMHO, it is better to be language-agnostic and solution-oriented. Language details can always be filled up. For example, last week, I assisted a student with his Java assignment, though I had worked in Java only 20 years ago. Concepts of class, object, array, list, dictionary, program flow, etc. are the same in all OO languages, isn't it?
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Just reading today's news, I discovered that C# will soon pass Java in popularity, according to TIOBE. My question is regardless of "popularity" I would like to know which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone? Just saying...
Friday 13th?
Slow Eddie wrote:
which language is most desired/required by employers looking to hire someone?
Last time I read on how Tiobe was gathered it indicated that they are in fact gathering exactly that information. Only sources other than that which I have ever found were based on surveys often from sites that had a bias and often seemed to be of the form of 'do you think you will use X in the next year?'