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In the book, The Pragmatic Programmer the authors suggest that you learn a new language every year. With so many new languages these days, what will be your next programming language and why?

Personally I can't keep up with one new language a year, but I've been around a good handful of different languages and that has been of great help to me in both my career and the way I look at programming in general.

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vote up 9 vote down

Ruby due to the dynamic nature and Rails of course. I'm actually hoping to gain more insight into true object oriented programming by learning Ruby.

I would add to that the fact that I think learning a language a year is a dumb notion (probably going to catch some flack for that one) because learning a new language is really not that interesting. I find the frameworks which support the language are more compelling like the Ruby-case. Ruby is a neat language but the real value lies in the Rails framework.

I'm generally more interested in the results I can achieve with something than the something itself :)

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Haskell. Because learning to think "functionally" seems like a very good thing and because it looks mature enough to be a realistic (or close) choice for projects.

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C#, because it's the most sensible choice in the current economic situation. Though, if I really had a choice it'd be Lisp. (Currently a C++ programmer)

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F# - I am a .NET developer, and i'm interested in the fact that it deals with Multi-threading simply

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Python, as I am overdue for learning a scripting langauge after sticking with Java for a long time. I'm also interested in using the Django framework, so that should be a good motivation.

Another language on my list is Haskell, as I think I should take a look at a functional language after sticking with imperative languages for a long time.

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One PL a year is a guideline, not a hard rule... :-) And "learning" is vague: is it reading a book and get away with it (if so, I am supposed to know Forth, Lisp, APL, PostScript, etc.)? Or writing some little test code and run it? Or mastering it enough to write a small, usable application?

Anyway, on my radar, there is Python for quite some time (a classical, and might be handy for little scripts or more), and Groovy (because I want to explore at least one JVM language, and I am not fond of Scala syntax. And there are some cool stuff possible with it).
And perhaps, someday, JavaFX.

As always, the main issue is time (even more when you have a family life!).

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Learning Python at the moment, Lua soon to follow. I'm gearing up for the game industry ;)

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Spend a lot of time on Lua, it'll serve you well. Awesome language, imo. – GMan Jun 20 at 14:54
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OCaml because it's both functional and quick.

D because it looks like a good alternative to C++.

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Lisp

I want to understand the functional approach and I love Emacs.

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I've had Perl in my sights for 2+ years now -- I think it is about time.

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I'm not going to learn a certain language because of the hype around it or to see what new features it might have.

Once in a while I join interesting open source projects and just learn the language used in that project, so I can participate.

Or to say it another way: I do not choose a tool (like a hammer) from my toolbox and then try to solve any problem with that tool (which may or may not work), but instead I choose my language each time a new problem shall be solved.

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I don't find that advice particularly useful, IMO your knowledge will be too extended and shallow. Better learn and master a new language every 3 years or so.

In my case it's C# (after a Java and cpp/c past), and I'd like to know a functional language too (F# maybe?)

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I'm a PHP developer at the moment.

I'm planning to learn C# to gain more insight into OO concepts. Plus I'd like to write some desktop apps for a change.

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None, even though Pragmatic Programmer was one of the best readings I've got on the subject, I don't agree with whole learn a new language every year debate.

Although not a new language but, what I'm going to learn next is Framework 3.0, 3.5. LINQ and all other shiny "cool" stuff.

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Learning APIs is like learning a language to be honest - a very domain specific language. Same as learning SQL, even though that's a query language. The general gist is to not get in a rut with what you know. I'm going to learn JavaFX this year - it's Java and a scripting language... – JeeBee Dec 12 '08 at 11:19
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I'm a C# developer and intend to stick with C# for a couple more years (and why not?). My next 'language' shall be domain-specific.

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The last language I learned was Ruby. Ruby is not completely different from languages like Java, C#, Python, Perl, but has some nice ideas behind it and the OO structure of the language and its core libraries are well designed. Also the Rails framework was a reason to learn Ruby.

However the next language will be C++, simply because I need it to customize software, which is written in C++.

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vote up 29 vote down

Some highly skilled people don't recommend to always learn the newest technology, instead you should practice fundamentals.

A list of suggestions, found on google China:

  1. Practice the fundamentals. Don’t spend all your efforts on popular languages and tools, and the skills listed in the job advertisements. Instead, master your skills in statistics, computing, databases, operating systems, computer architecture, computer networks and discrete mathematics. Try to solve problems in Donald Knuth’s “Art of Programming”. If you can solve most of the problems, your skills in computing are not bad.

  2. Seek more challenges. Experience in programming can reinforce your knowledge. Try to accumulate the experience of writing 100,000 lines of code when you are in your 4th year.

  3. Practice, practice, practice. Do not underestimate any of the actual work, such as seemingly simple coding or testing. You will gain professional experience pursuing and paying attention to the details of the code.

  4. Don’t forget about mathematics. Math is gymnastics to your brain. Math is everywhere. If you are particularly interested in math-intensive tasks, such as video and image processing, you will need these skills as your tools.

  5. Develop a team spirit and to learn how to work well with others.

  6. Encourage innovation, and don’t necessarily stick to the authors code in the books.

  7. Work strategically. Try to find meaningful and interesting summer job or part-time job if it does not affect you schoolwork. Go find a place that pays attention to programming. Working with a good boss, your code will be used by clients. Don’t rush to become a boss. Your goal must be to learn from other people. When you are working or finding a job, don’t only look at benefits and the job title. Pick an environment that encourages learning, a company that is willing to train employees, and a company that regards you as an important person. Last, but not least, pick a good boss.

http://pthree.org/2007/05/24/good-advice-for-computer-science-students/

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+0, not an answer to the question – Daniel Jun 20 at 15:34
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I'm a Java developer, developing applications on the cutting edge of Java ME, also I'm, of course, familiar with C++ and I know the basics of PHP 'cos I had to build my own site ant simple XHTML was not very convinient.

If I were to choose next programming language, than except for studying PHP properly I would probably pay some attention to interpreted languages such as Python and Ruby. And certainly Groovy is also worth studying.

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I quit my otherwise fine job last month, and took up a new position, mainly to make the switch from PHP to Ruby. So right now I'm learning Ruby. I'm still not sure such a radical move was the wisest choice, but it works; I already feel rather confident after having used the language professionally for less than two weeks.

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I currently work as a Java developer, but over the years I have learned:

  • BASIC (age 11, home)
  • Logo (School - not in depth)
  • Z80 Assembler (home)
  • 68000 Assembler (home)
  • Pascal (age 17/18 school)
  • ML (18, university)
  • Modula 3 (19, university)
  • Java (19, university - in depth)
  • C (20, university)
  • Prolog (20, university - not in depth)
  • Perl (post university - in depth for work)
  • PL/SQL and PL/pgSQL
  • Java 5 (and JSPs, Servlets, Struts, ... enough new features and APIs to warrant listing again)

I've mostly forgotten the assembly languages and the not-in-depth languages now, it was a long time ago. I'm sure with a book and a week I could get back up to speed in them however.

From this I assume that most people will learn a language a year at university, and post university when time is much more precious they may learn one every few years, but they will also learn new APIs within each language (JavaFX, LINQ, etc) as their in-depth knowledge expands. JavaFX for me next year, I've got a good work-related excuse for that one.

What am I missing here? Python and Ruby certainly. PHP I know enough to hack it if need be, but I fail to see why I would use that over Java which is just a nicer language despite its many flaws. I'm missing the Microsoft ecosystem languages. I should revisit functional languages - Haskell seems a good choice.

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Currently Delphi programmer, I already programmed in Basic, Assembly (a bit), C++, Java.

The next I think will be C#. I Like so much this language. I prefer C# instead Java, it is more pratical for me.

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I'm currently considering Smalltalk, F# and Erlang from the perspective of being very different from what I've done before. I rather suspect the next one will actually be Javascript, given my to-do list for the next year...

Already learned (in approximate chronological order)

  • BASIC
  • COBOL
  • PL/1
  • C
  • SQL (various dialects, declarative and procedural)
  • VB/VBA
  • Delphi
  • C#
  • Ruby
  • Python

(plus bits and pieces of a few others)

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I'm doing primarily Java and a little C#. I've already started looking into F# and Scala. Hopefully next year I can really dig into one (or both?) of them.

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  • ANSI C
  • Objective-C (for iPhone development primarily.)
  • C++
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Well, I suppose the truest answer would be Python 3.0 . Of course, sense I'm coming from Python 2.5 , it probably doesn't count too much.

My next non-Python language, though, is going to be ANSI C. Python integration + speed + computer science education + history should make for a happy journey. :)

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C# because despite having avoided .NET and its associated languages forever (I'm more of a UNIX/Mac/Java guy by day) I got an Xbox 360 for my birthday and XNA is exceedingly bright and shiny.

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Just one? I'm currently learning Objective-C in order to be able to write OS-X & iPhone apps and Ruby because Rails seems like such a great way to write web apps (I've done ISAPI with C++, PHP & ASP.NET with C#).

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Oh in the next year? Ruby, C++, Python, and I guess OpenGL.

Then eventually F# or Haskell.

Demands of the university these days.

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Ada. I just ordered a book on it from Amazon.com (along with books on computational physics, astrodynamics, strategic missile guidance, and spacecraft attitude dynamics... I wonder if I'm on any lists now...)

I just taught myself Python; before that, it was F#, and C#.

Actually, come to think of it, I need to fully teach myself C++. I can read it just fine, and write a lot of it perfectly fine. But I still haven't got the hang of templates yet.

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Hi,

In my university I took a course on principle of programming language in II semester. It actually talks of different types of programming language. And in my later semesters I took elective subject on each of these language. Not very exhaustive though.

  1. procedural languages ( C )
  2. Object oriented language ( Java )
  3. functional languages ( Haskell )
  4. Rule based languages ( Prolog )
  5. Scripting language ( Python ) ( A learned a little ) ( I choose python out of perl/ruby/python. I will add this scripting language all though it was not in the course work. )

Writing the same basic programs I did in the other language with the new languages was interesting, and I really liked them.

Later I learned c#, vb.net but they were like learning syntax rather than learning something new.

I really liked this approach of learning programming language for each pradigm.

I wanted to learn Lisp, but these days I really slack off.

Thanks.

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