R
R
Ruslan Tovmasyan2014-03-08 14:25:30
go
Ruslan Tovmasyan, 2014-03-08 14:25:30

What future can you predict for the Go programming language?

Actually, the opinion of more experienced programming specialists is interesting, everything is somehow vague on the network, but many praise it. Interesting forecasts for 3-4 years ahead.
Ps on my own, I was wary of the choice of language for the future, since I will spend the next year in the army, and I need to think about what I will do next, and what to develop, and suddenly Go will take off! Thank you all in advance for your efforts! :)

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

5 answer(s)
S
Sergey Lerg, 2014-03-08
@sanslar

The future is bright. Looking for Go programmers companies will still be few, but more and more will use it.
For a freelancer, one of the most important things is Google App Engine. Everyone needs web services, and GAE has low cost, high performance with Go, and in general it is convenient to create. So I recommend.
Moreover, knowledge of Go will not prevent you from switching to some other language in the future if Go does not suit you. On the contrary, the more languages ​​you know, the easier it is to learn new ones.

S
strobegen, 2014-03-08
@strobegen

Of course, there are prospects, but for sure Go will remain a highly specialized language as it is now, it will occupy a small niche - I think it does not meet your goals. I would suggest that you study the
Scala + Java bundle. Java only on the one hand that there will always be a lot of job offers for it, but Scala as a very good language that combines a lot of concepts from different other languages ​​\u200b\u200band is very practical - already now a lot of companies are rewriting their projects on it (that's why there are quite a few proposals where knowledge of Java and infrastructure is required in order to rewrite it all in Scala).
Rust is also most likely very promising - in fact, there is no stable release yet, and interest in it is already very large.

A
asd111, 2014-03-08
@asd111

For 3-4 years ahead, I’ll say for sure that the platform from 1C will be popular and 1C programmers will still be paid a lot.
Basic knowledge of data structures and algorithms (stacks, lists, trees; sorting, search, etc.), discrete mathematics are almost never outdated.
Go is not popular in our country and I think nothing will change in a year.

A
Alex, 2014-04-06
@alehano

The future is great. In the West, the growth in popularity is exponential readwrite.com/2014/03/21/google-go-golang-programm...
In terms of the number of commits on github, it already occupies 1/10 of Java.
In our country, as always, everything lags behind by several years.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question