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abubakr19942014-11-30 12:53:59
Java
abubakr1994, 2014-11-30 12:53:59

Which EPs will be more in demand in 10-15 years?

I am a student, I am 20 years old.
We mainly study C/C++ at the university, other PLs are secondary: Delphi7, Assembler, Java, Lisp (that is, few hours are allocated for them).
I wanted to know which PLs I should study seriously.

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12 answer(s)
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Oleg Gamega, 2014-11-30
@abubakr1994

In 10-15 years, AI will be in trend, programming will be reduced to "Hey! Stupid piece of iron, make a site like VK current cooler!"
But seriously, don't learn languages, learn technology.

  • c/c++ is not my favorite jap, the market share has decreased significantly, but it can outlive us
  • Assembler the same eggs as c / c ++ there are fewer vacancies for him, but they will live for a very long time
  • Delphi is already dead, attempts to resuscitate puff of necrophilia, while like any perversion dear ....
  • java ─ death has been predicted for her for a very long time, but so far the number of vacancies is only growing
  • C# is nothing to say here, as long as windows is alive and C# is quite capable of surviving windows, it is very similar to java ─ they borrow concepts from each other with amazing stability

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Artem, 2014-11-30
@mrRontgen

Learn algorithms and data structures. They will live forever! And when you need it, you will apply this knowledge on any PL (perhaps even on a new one), and you will not have a price!

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Ext4, 2014-11-30
@Ext4

Programmers don't write programs in PL, they program in PL.
These are two big differences.
And if you want to know the degree of demand for a particular language as a tool, then almost everything that you have listed is in demand to one degree or another. Unless Assembler is rare, because Now there is a fashion for cross-platform applications and independence from the processor architecture.
In a business environment, solutions are often found on ASP .NET, JavaEE.

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Ivan, 2014-11-30
@LiguidCool

I think with the advent of the node, the popularity of JS will grow. Well, Si IMHO is always in demand.
In general, learn to code, learning the syntax is not a problem.

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AxisPod, 2014-12-02
@AxisPod

Well, I can only say one thing. It is difficult to answer what languages ​​will be in demand. But fortune tellers are in demand now, so I can offer you to become a fortune teller.

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Evgeny, 2016-01-04
Batkovich @quickhabr

Languages ​​are not popular, but their effectiveness. Everything will be in demand. Even Delphi in the form of FreePascal will be alive, because there is a niche for it. In general, users don’t care what it is and how, use what you like best

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Eddy_Em, 2014-11-30
@Eddy_Em

C will always be in demand.
And any rubbish like C# may well become rotten, as B, D, Ada, etc. once rotten.

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beduin01, 2014-11-30
@beduin01

D , Go, the same C# is sure to live. But the pluses, yes, in 10 years they will go rotten and will be needed only to support a bunch of legacy code. Java 100% will leave the market.

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Dremkin, 2014-12-01
@Dremkin

In 15 years there will be continuous Internet applications. Unless, of course, there is a large-scale war)
i.e. javascript frameworks, server web languages ​​- that's it.

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Crash, 2014-12-26
@Bandicoot

PHP and JS will also be in demand in web development) Although it is possible that over time Python will become more popular than PHP, or JS will override both of them and almost everything will be done on it.

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Timur Sharipov, 2015-01-31
@shtr

There is nothing better for the desktop than Embarcadero/Delphi. After 10 years in C++, you start to appreciate compilation speed...

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leventov, 2015-02-11
@leventov

I advise you to pay attention to Rust, now it is just beginning, and the enthusiasm is already very high, it may well "fly", and if you are in it from the very beginning, you will find yourself at the top of the pyramid without super efforts. This is not c++/java wherever you spit, "experts" and "gurus" with 15-20 years of experience, who are very difficult to outdo in the corporate hierarchy and payroll.

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