Well, besides C and C++, I know some Java.
What about you fellow programmers
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Well, besides C and C++, I know some Java.
What about you fellow programmers
python
I can probably write hello world in ~10 languages.
Have used Java, C#, ActionScript/JS, PHP "seriously".
Lately I've been experimenting with F#.
Yeah, it depends on what it meant by "know". For myself, I would count Java, PHP and Python, even though I have been exposed to many other programming/scripting languages. (In fact, I first started out with Javascript.)Quote:
Originally Posted by cyberfish
BASIC (VB, QBasic), MATLAB/Octave, LISP, Python, JavaScript
"Know" is a complicated word. But besides C++:
Feel comfortable around:
C#, Erlang, ActionScript, Lua
Need to look up references more often when programming:
Ruby, Powershell
C/C++, Java, Groovy, Perl, Bash, Windows Batch files, VB, Visual Test, Rexx... (although I haven't used the last few for years, so I probably forgot most of those languages)
Comfortable:
C/C++, C#, Java, Python
Have used/occasionally use
Javascript, VB, ASM, VBA, Groovy, shell scripting
Learning:
Erlang
Comfortable:
C, C++, C#, Matlab/Octave
I've used them a lot, but it's been awhile so I've forgotten things:
Java, PHP, Python
Have some knowledge of:
JavaScript, iShell (a very obscure language), LabVIEW, Flash/ActionScript, BASIC, Logo, Verilog
Comfortable:
C, C++ and to some extent SQL, java, php (i know the syntax and general layout, but not used it enough to remember libraries and things like that)
Less comfortable:
C#, Haskell, Matlab, VHDL
Have used:
Erlang
1) Know the syntax and a lot about the libraries: Java, JavaScript
2) Know the syntax, but have to look up most library stuff: C#, Haskell, ActionScript, PHP
3) Know some of the syntax: Perl, Python, ML, CLisp, VB, D, Eiffel, Forth, PostScript, probably more
- Assembly (probably pretty rusty right now)
- BASIC
- VB
- C# .NET 3.5
- C++/CLI .NET 3.5
- ActionScript
- Lua
I know C#, VB, VB.Net, QBASIC and C++/CLI (Code Painter).
I started Ada, R and PHP.
R is a statistics language which is functional like F#.
In my case, the more I code in any language, the more I come to the realization that I know very little - there's always something to research. :P
Hmm... as for the topic and to humor myself, I'd go with php, javascript, visual basic, and the odd C/C++ consolde app.