Zahid Iqbal
Weaksauce
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2015
- Messages
- 64
I have to expertise in latest web development especially in discussion websites and graphic website. Which language i have to learn. any suggestion?
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I have to expertise in latest web development especially in discussion websites and graphic website. Which language i have to learn. any suggestion?
C# development does not require Visual Studio.Otherwise stay clear of anything that requires you to have to use Visual Studio, such as C#
There are several free versions of Visual Studio.Visual Studio because it's a really expensive IDE
You can develop for OSX with essentially the same languages as any other OS.except Mac OS X, which has it's own programming languages.
I have to expertise in latest web development especially in discussion websites and graphic website. Which language i have to learn. any suggestion?
All versions of Linux and Unix.....including Apple's OS X...have Perl installed. They also have Apache installed.
Has been easy for me to transition between work sites. Perl is also very good at handling data on the backend.
The answer totally depends on the environment and details of the job.
How did the OP manage to get themselves banned so quickly?
Depends what you want to do, honestly.
Nowadays, I don't typically recommend you start with C/C++, though I highly recommend you learn them (and understand them) at some point. Java, or better yet, C# are excellent beginner languages that still expose you to a lot of what you'd do in C/C++, without all the headaches that go with C.
That being said, outside of creating apps for in house purposes, anything you release is going to be C based, so learning C++ is more or less required for application development. If you work with hardware, then you need to learn straight C, and should probably at least learn basic assembly so you understand how the hardware actually works.
For web development, you're looking more at the scripting languages like Python.
Really though, once you learn how to design code properly, the rest is just picking up the syntax. On a day to day basis, I work on the following languages:
Assembly (Non-X86 based), HPBASIC85, HTBASIC, JOVIAL, ADA, C, C++, C#, and occasionally, VBA and VB6. And outside of basic C++ and Java, I've pretty much had to learn the others on the fly. But at the end of the day, code is code, you just need to learn the syntax behind it.
If you're gonna go that far, no VHDL and logic circuits? >_>
Otherwise stay clear of anything that requires you to have to use Visual Studio, such as C# and Visual Studio because it's a really expensive IDE and programming for UNIX and UNiX like Operating Systems is much more affordable except Mac OS X, which has it's own programming languages.
I don't think the cost of the IDE should be the determining factor when planning your long-term career goals. But even so, Microsoft does offer free versions of Visual Studio for individual use, and the expensive paid versions will likely be covered by your employer anyway.