Which functional language has the best job prospects?
Which functional language has the best job prospects?
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Java :^)
But honestly, I think the only one that I see widely used is Scala. Or you could try new hipster language, like elixir, and look at startups.
Lisp
>Sup Forums hates dynamic programming languages with weird symtax and hates webdev
>shills lisp whose industry application is limited to webdev
Erlang / elixir.
Scala will make you a shit tone of cash.
The industry loves Spark.
Bullshit on scala
When will this functional meme die already?
when referential transparency stops being better than mutable pOOP.
Buckle up, you're in for a rough next few decades, everything's gonna become more functional. It's already happening.
OOP is shit but functional programming isn't any better. Enjoy your cryptic sigil syntax.
Nuh-uh, you just have to learn to read this esoteric dogshit.
Why do Pajeet POO programmers pretend like functional programming is somehow harder to understand than AbstractBeanProxyFactory?
>I cant understand basic tree graphs
Elixir
Why do Pajeet functional programmers lack the fundamental ability of being able to read a post?
it looks like good candidates are scala clojure f#
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Is scala fun!?!?!
Unironically F#.
Javascript
In my area, the only one I regularly see is Scala, which doesn't mean much because every bit of Scala I've seen in production has just been Java transcribed into Scala.
JavaScript
Why
ocaml/haskell
elixir
C
JavaScript or Scala.
Learn Scala. The complile times suck but other than that has many benefits over other languages.
Learn how to use monads and program with immutable data structures.
It is fun to masturbate 8 times while you wait for your code to compile.
Erlang and Scala, for some niches you might not want to work in.
In which one of the two half-finished compilers?