The Top 5 Programming Languages in 2021 to get a job

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#coding #programming #javascript
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6). C++ 1:57
5). C# 2:58
4). PHP 3:52
3). Python 5:07
2). Java 6:38
1). Javascript 8:56

ankitmehrotra
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My dud your editing has become crazy good! Well done

the_full_stack_junkie
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Just remember, to be considered a "good" programmer you always have to let people know how terrible PHP is... even if the conversation is not about programming.

BillClinton
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My actual first experience with programming was with a C++ community college course in 2017 and for some reason I was extremely confused and dropped the course. Three years later, I learned JavaScript from a Udemy course and I finally understood the fundamentals of programming and now I’ve picked up python as well.

simranthiara
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This was great! I hate it when Youtubers claim one programing language is better than others without backing it up with verifiable data. It’s nice to see you backing up your claims with data we can verify for ourselves. Just a quick suggestion though can you put the remaining 2 years for Golang in the description box? There’s a small error at 8:37 where 2019 & 2020 are cropped out. Anyways thank you! 👏🏾👏🏾

azreal
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I swear that you have the best, most-appealing, sober, friendly, and attractive broadcasting voice so ever! Subscribed!

bitehunter
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If you did the animations and graphs you did a great job. I personally was going to skip through the video 10 seconds at a time to get the TLDR, but when I saw the the graphs and transitions caught my eye. They went really well with the content you presented and made it a more memorable experience.

astackzzzz
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This is a very high quality video! C++ is a superset of C89, but they two languages have diverged over the years. C++ is also heavily used in Game development like C#. I'm really glad to see you include the industry domain each of these languages are popular in. This is a key, yet often overlooked, metric in helping someone new to the industry know which language they should learn.

OGBhyve
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i' ve got to admit that this is the most comprehensive video about top 5 programming language..the editing is superbly awesome the voice is cool the animation is super even the part about the honourable programming please keep up great awesome work

andercarvalho
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6. C++
5. C#
4. PHP
3. Python
2. Java
1. JavaScript

rosuchristian
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I think that you will find that C# is closer to Java, than it is to C.

jimgsewell
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Java has a lot of stack overflow answers because it's what they teach in schools so tons of students have questions.

tootyrnt
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Javascript is listed in a lot of job descriptions, but may be a secondary focus. You also have to remember, jobs with javascript/python focus will also have the most competition because everyone knows them.

I think Java would be a solid choice for future. Still a ton of enterprises using it (for android as well), and newer developers don’t focus on it ) Everyone learns python, js, and the front end frameworks

yanksbroncs
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Dude your editing is just INCREDIBLE. Keeps us engaged the whole video. Great job!

mohanbhat
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Holly molly, your editing is fantastic!
The content as well!

michaelcharlescotofan
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Are you into web development? Then Javascript. You could learn Python, but JS is the de facto.

The holy trinity of web development - HTML, CSS, and Javascript.

Are you into AI (requires tons of advanced math so you may do better by going to college)? Or just want to start? Then Python.

Do some projects; a username/password, a short text-based RPG game, a Tweet letter counter that counts each letter with a limit of 150 letters. Start simple and then gradually add more features.

Learning the basics pretty easy. Practice along and make your own projects, but please don't just watch the tutorial and then celebrate 'I know Python (or JS) now!' because the real challenge comes when it's time to solve problems by writing your own algorithms. You'll need to know how to fuse everything together from what you've learned in order to find solutions. Try to solve the Fibonacci and the Fizzbuzz problems using Python. These are good benchmarks to determine where you stand. I can't post the links, but search for them.

I recommend you to search for a free PDF book 'Automate the Boring Stuff with Python' by Al Sweigart.

How much time to be good at Python depends on the time you devote to learning each day. We are all different in absorbing new material so I don't know the real length, but let's say after you read this comment you decide to play Dark Souls 3 for two hours. Those two hours could have been spent learning and practicing Python. Now you're two hours 'behind' your goal of mastering Python. Not playing the blame game here, I have my days of being burned out so I just go and play Overwatch for three hours, but imagine how much more I could have learned about web development by increasing my knowledge by 5%, 10%, or even just 1% within those three hours. Does this mean you should always study and never relax by gaming or watching Netflix? No. Everyone needs rest. Just try not to take advantage of your rest time by gaming ten hours a day and studying for five minutes.

Take into account the examples used in tutorials like they may include translation lessons to help you understand loops, lists, and branching better. They are short/easy examples instructors have made up. Your boss or clients will ask you to develop real life programs. What you code will make you money and affect your reputation. You're in the real world now so you will be assigned to write all sorts of programs. IMHO, to be really great at Python could take years depending on time. Let's say 6 - 8 hours/day and you're a fast learner, it could take three to five years.

If by chance you're thinking of learning Python, JS, Java, C++, etc. all at once, don't. It will drive you crazy! We're all different, yes, but most of us can't handle information overload. Stick to one language until you become comfortable. These languages are all different, but they have the same or similar principles. They all have logic, branching, functions, data types, etc. If you become comfortable with one language, then learning another language will be easier to understand so you'll have the advantage over your peers who know very little to nothing.

I recommend you to go to Stack Overflow to ask and get more support from other programmers. It's a great place to ask questions.

There's a version list you can choose from if you want to use an exact version. It's on the Downloads link in the official Python website. Scroll down a quarter way where it says 'Looking for a specific release?'

You can also use any version as long as it's 3.x. The current version is 3.9.6, but it will still work. There are minor improvements, but nothing major until 4.0 releases (likely by 2025) which tutorials using Python 3 will need a complete new tutorial because it likely won't be backward compatible.

swallowedinthesea
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Programming languages should be seen as tools, they all have different perks and should be used when suited best. I personally would learn a variety of languages that have a wide range of uses, so I can tackle a larger amount of problems (I guess what I'm trying to say is don't learn a language just because it's popular), developers tend to jump on bandwagons mindlessly to fit in; an example being everyone who hates php, I understand that it has it's flaws (like any other language) but I find it's easy for backend development, programmers can be so pretentious and say "I can program in C why would I need to stoop to the lower depths of php", yes C is a complex language but you can spend 30mins programming something in C that can take a few minutes in php.

aaron
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Great video man, thank you for putting in the time to make it!

rubica
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Very interesting approach :)
Thank you for sharing.
JavaScript is indeed an important one. The flexibility is great.
I don't love the language, but the data doesn't lie.

sthefanocarvalho
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I’m currently learning C# as my first language. I originally started learning Lua just to code games on roblox but later I quit and now a year later I decided to take it seriously and learn C# so that one day I can program games with Unity

idontevenknowanymore