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Subject line says it all. What's next on your list of things to tackle and get to grips with? Got a language you want to learn? Want to grok dynamic programming? Think it's about time you understood type theory?

What's next? And why?

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119 Answers

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For me it is a better understanding of LINQ, jQuery and MVC

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Currently at top of the list: jQuery

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I really want to do something with C#, if only I had enough time.

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For me it's SOA

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  • jQuery
  • MVC
  • F#
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vote up 37 vote down

More Python and Django.

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  • WCF, WPF and linq
  • jquery
  • other neato .net 3.5 features
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VB.net

......

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Ruby on Rails. Because it's about as far as I could get from my current skill set without becoming a Haskell programmer or something.

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WPF and WTL (basically both ends of the desktop UI dev spectrum)

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Cocoa, Objective C

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Smalltalk, Objective-C and SOA Best Pratice. Ok I know , I'm a bit spreaded out

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Functional Programming, mainly Haskell.

I'm armed with GNU Emacs (with Haskell Mode), the online version of Real World Haskell and the GHC and I'm ready to get stuck in.

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Haskell More F# PHP Javascript More D XML.

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Lisp and Haskell. Lisp macros seem to be mind-blowingly powerful.

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Javascript for fun.

Obscure bug at work is pushing me to learn strace, tcpdump, signals, poll, and such like.

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Silverlight 2 and JavaFX

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Microsoft ASP.NET

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Much more EMACS...

I can't really rely on TextMate anymore. It's awesome, but it's only for Mac.

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vote up 6 vote down

For me, Lua or Erlang will be next.

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Ruby and C++ because I haven't been there yet. I've been doing .NET (C# and VB.NET) and JavaScript development for a few years now, and it's about time I learn some development languages/platforms that aren't Microsoft based. FYI, before .NET I was a VB6 and Classic ASP developer.

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N2. It's an open source, ASP.NET MVC enabled CMS.

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C++ and the STL. My knowledge in the area is limited to the academic stuff. As someone in the C# / .NET side of things, it'd kind of nice not being hand-held through non-trivial tasks. :)

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  1. Creating a LabVIEW driver.
  2. How to develop a business plan and sell it to Venture capital.
  3. Learning the tools for embedded platform development.
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Lisp. I took a class in college, and I've been meaning to get back to it ever since. I finally have a project or two on the horizon that use lisp as a scripting language, so I've finally got the excuse.

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DirectX 10.1 and 11 when it comes out. New rendering pipeline looks awesome.

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I'd like to do more with Python perhaps some dabbling in Django as well.

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Ruby on Rails, or Silverlight. Coin flip as soon as I finish Head First C#.

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Better understanding of OO programming. C++. Security. Struts/Hibernate/Spring.

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