StackOverflow, LinkedIn, and many, many others regularly poll users regarding the programming languages they use. They publish their results using categories like Most Popular, Most Hated, Most Increase In Usage, etc. I'm curious to know what programming languages players of ED use (or used) in their jobs or as hobbiests.
I've been mostly a Microsoft-er for most of my 30-plus-year career in software development, from back in the days of DOS and into the Windows eras.
In the past I've used Pascal (one professional project in the 80's, the rest in an educational setting where I was the instructor), every version of Visual Basic (even a professional project using GW Basic in the 80's) and VBA (think Access & Excel programming), PowerBuilder, dBase, and a little C/C++.
For the past 20-ish years, I've mostly utilized .NET in both VB and C# flavors. Of course there's also the secondary languages used in projects, such as HTML, SQL (SQL Server, Oracle, MySQL, et. al.), JavaScript, Razor (MVC/C#), and a few others over the years. For my current position, I'm learning and using K2.
During a recent water cooler conversation with peers, I calculated that I've learned and used over 30 languages in my career. For some reason, I have more trouble learning spoken languages than programming languages. Go figure.
What about y'all?
I've been mostly a Microsoft-er for most of my 30-plus-year career in software development, from back in the days of DOS and into the Windows eras.
In the past I've used Pascal (one professional project in the 80's, the rest in an educational setting where I was the instructor), every version of Visual Basic (even a professional project using GW Basic in the 80's) and VBA (think Access & Excel programming), PowerBuilder, dBase, and a little C/C++.
For the past 20-ish years, I've mostly utilized .NET in both VB and C# flavors. Of course there's also the secondary languages used in projects, such as HTML, SQL (SQL Server, Oracle, MySQL, et. al.), JavaScript, Razor (MVC/C#), and a few others over the years. For my current position, I'm learning and using K2.
During a recent water cooler conversation with peers, I calculated that I've learned and used over 30 languages in my career. For some reason, I have more trouble learning spoken languages than programming languages. Go figure.
What about y'all?
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