Useful coding languages to learn?

useful coding languages to learn?
what do you need to know to get a job in it?

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Malbolge is all you'll ever need.

The only useful language in existence is Ocaml and that’s all you need to know, forever

This, and occasionally INTERCAL.

>coding

I find it bizarre that people use the term "coding" to mean programming. For decades, we used the word "coding" for the work of low-level staff in a business programming team. The designer would write a detailed flow chart, then the "coders" would write code to implement the flow chart. This is quite different from what we did and do in the hacker community -- with us, one person designs the program and writes its code as a single activity.

Depends what you want to get into...

Java and C# are the most common OO programming languages that I've ever come across in industry.

For research and machine learning sectors in industry you could start learning Python. The likes of J.P Morgan use Python a lot, their data is very very clean.

Then you also have your hardcore C/C++ dudes who probably know assembly language to some extent. These are your computer engineer types.

Learn COBOL you won't regret it user!

I believe that, in your own stumbling and semi-literate way, you are attempting to discuss programming languages... not cryptography. Please confirm.

you have to know someone willing to give you a job. what languages you have learnt means jack shit.

Haskell.

>useful coding languages to learn?
Javascript, no memes. You can't go wrong with it and you'll find a job. Or just research job postings.
>what do you need to know to get a job in it?
Depend where you're applying, so it will either be programming basics like algorithms , data structures etc (if you learn javascript first you probably won't learn those) or exactly what you learned about javascript , something that is actually useful and not theory , or both. To learn the basics of programming I suggest you learn first C and how a computer works .

this . The language is just a tool. The success in it is based on how good of a business man you are , being an expert at programming makes you just a code monkey and you don't want that , you want to write as little code as possible. Unless you're a nerd or the next zucc

>zucc
Let me correct that , zucc is more of the businessman type.You want to be like him

If you don't know, and you're more science/math oriented, just learn python.
If you don't know, and you're more frontend/design oriented (and/or homosexual), just learn javascript.

You can't really go wrong with either.

Assembly

> le hacker community

what hacker community was stallman part of? what a delusional autist

>science/math
>python
kek

The best language to get raped by jew bankers who think you are their property

>code with carl

But you make good shekels.

Holy C, the language compiled by god's own divine intellect that runs in real time and ahead of time

>Javascript, no memes. You can't go wrong with it and you'll find a job. Or just research job postings.

Technically speaking, start with this. Then learn AngularJS, React, Spring, Node.js, Java and SQL and there's no fucking way you can't get a job or build your own shit.

>Holy C
This, but watch out for CIA niggers after you start using it... They monitor that shit closely.

Rust, no one can compete in speed

Do you want to pick up any other language with zero effort because you know the fundamentals of computing science? If so, C, C++, some kind of asm, and a lisp.

Unironically EO:
github.com/yegor256/eo

The language on her eye, basic.

Java and C++

Web Development is good too, but it's infested with faggots and broken mess.

I went to lunch with someGNUfans, and was sitting down to eat some tteokbokki(*), when a waitress set down six chopsticks right in front of me. It occurred to me that perhaps these were meant for three people, but it was more amusing to imagine that I was supposed to use all six. I did not know any way to do that, so I realized that if I could come up with a way, it would be a hack. I started thinking. After a few seconds I had an idea.

First I used my left hand to put three chopsticks into my right hand. That was not so hard, though I had to figure out where to put them so that I could control them individually. Then I used my right hand to put the other three chopsticks into my left hand. That was hard, since I had to keep the three chopsticks already in my right hand from falling out. After a couple of tries I got it done.

Then I had to figure out how to use the six chopsticks. That was harder. I did not manage well with the left hand, but I succeeded in manipulating all three in the right hand. After a couple of minutes of practice and adjustment, I managed to pick up a piece of food using three sticks converging on it from three different directions, and put it in my mouth.

It didn't become easy—for practical purposes, using two chopsticks is completely superior. But precisely because using three in one hand is hard and ordinarily never thought of, it has "hack value", as my lunch companions immediately recognized. Playfully doing something difficult, whether useful or not, that is hacking.

I later told the Korea story to a friend in Boston, who proceded to put four chopsticks in one hand and use them as two pairs—picking up two different pieces of food at once, one with each pair. He had topped my hack. Was his action, too, a hack? I think so. Is he therefore a hacker? That depends on how much he likes to hack.

...

>>this

follow the path of DoD bros

learn c++ before java as they eat that shit up for the mems and proper feels