S
S
Sotnik132015-03-27 00:21:55
Java
Sotnik13, 2015-03-27 00:21:55

Parallel learning of Java and C# - is it possible?

I will not write an epilogue (why? and why?) and immediately ask the question - Is it possible to learn 2 languages ​​in parallel, namely Java and C#? Wouldn't this cause any problems?
I have seen and read similar threads. They have rather poor answers and I'm specifically interested in these two languages.
Thanks in advance for your opinions and replies!

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

5 answer(s)
V
Vladlen Grachev, 2015-03-27
@gwer

Can. The only question is efficiency.
Learning one language (or at least sequentially) is much more effective. Although there may be exceptions. For example, you are going to delve into only one, and the second you need to know only superficially, to solve simple problems.

H
hermit, 2015-03-27
@Alex9

As practice shows, it will be faster if you first study one, then the second will already be studied faster in comparison with the first. Parallel study is fraught with a hash, but if you are ready to devote 4 hours a day to each, then you can, but damn it, it’s better to master one and do something on it than half.

D
dtestyk, 2015-03-27
@dtestyk

when you start to get confused, you can read the comparison of C # and Java

V
vitvov, 2015-03-27
@vitvov

I would say that the parallel knowledge of several languages ​​is the future of any programmer. But if you are starting from scratch, then you should start from one. Learning one language, you are not distracted by syntax, but master OOP and algorithms. Knowing one language will help you learn another.

D
Dmitry Gavrilenko, 2015-03-27
@Maddox

You can, but you can't. From a biological point of view. A lot of stress on the brain. If we translate the performance of the brain in processing information and its successful fixation into long-term memory, into a book equivalent, we get 7 pages a day. This is the ceiling (no exaggeration, seriously). Further wear.
But in fact. Or you study them for 2x2+1 years, where there are 2 languages, two years each and sorting out the porridge, which you still can’t rake. Or 2x2. Why the same period? 2 years to study one language, after its successful study, it is possible and necessaryto put their knowledge into practice, this is exactly how the remaining 2 years will go. By the way, it will be possible to immediately translate programs into another language. With this alignment, you will learn both languages ​​in less time and you will have almost 2 years of experience writing work projects in 2 languages.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question