Hi, Sup Forums

Hi, Sup Forums
let's see which programming language is the most profitable, also a thread for fetus programmers that are in doubt what to learn!

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amazon.com/Programming-Principles-Practice-Using-Cpp/dp/0321543726
amazon.com/Data-Structures-Algorithms-Adam-Drozdek/dp/1133608426
amazon.com/Advanced-Programming-in-the-UNIX-Environment/dp/0321525949
amazon.com/Algorithm-Design-Jon-Kleinberg/dp/0321295358
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RoR

just start learning to make something, don't listen to/take advice from anyone on this website.

assembly, because that's what hacks are written in

This. Too many goddamn newfags worry about what to learn instead of the general application of programming.

what the actual fuck are you on

try haskell

Try this OP. My uncle learned this language and makes $463 per hour. There's a limited number of tutorials available on the Internet for about an hour if you hurry up.

>most profitable
MISRA C
C11/c89

itt

If everything compiles to assembly, you are not wrong. Shell Code in assembly, sure... But for god sakes hard no.

Learn C and be proficient enough to understand how ti compiles to assembly, to look for exploits.

this

>which programming language is the most profitable

Look at job ads in the IT category.

Old, obscure languages can be a fucking goldmine, if there's still code that needs maintaining. Such a language can give you near total job security too, because of the fact that not many people know the language, especially not Poo in the Loos.

this

How about Python retards.

ABAP
old, but still widly used in business

Learn C++

>amazon.com/Programming-Principles-Practice-Using-Cpp/dp/0321543726
>amazon.com/Data-Structures-Algorithms-Adam-Drozdek/dp/1133608426
>amazon.com/Advanced-Programming-in-the-UNIX-Environment/dp/0321525949
>amazon.com/Algorithm-Design-Jon-Kleinberg/dp/0321295358

Haskell is the most profitable because you'll either:
1) Be a quant and find out the next bubble to burst, or
2) Win a noble prize in mathematics.

>Kleinbergs Algorithm Design book

That book is crazy good, but hard to keep up with sometimes.

>anything that doesn't compile

Why

hey noob fegets, try scratch. You will get lots of monies if you learn it.

We had a guy who develops Visual Studio and C++ stuff from Microsoft at my campus and was saying he knows a guy who came out of retirement for IBM because there legacy stuff uses some old obscure language. That old guy makes a ton of money, too, apparently.

how much does a typical dev in an embedded automotive software role earn?

>the most profitable

Either Java or WebDev


>programmers that are in doubt what to learn

C + Java + a scripting language + a functional langauge

Not surprising. My stepmom has been retired for about 8 years now. She's still getting calls with job offers, and twice they've been so good she couldn't pass them up. She got into IT back in the early 70s and she knows shit that young programmers will never bother learning about, because it's no longer the big thing, and there's simply not much opportunity to learn it except on your own, using ancient documentation. That's why for as long as she lives and is able to work, prospective employers are going to keep going to her, trying to get her to come out of retirement.