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<blockquote data-quote="Jaden" data-source="post: 390080" data-attributes="member: 51705"><p>And again, I know all of them competently except Perl as I chose not to learn it for now. Just to clarify, who are you to tell me what I know about languages you've never seen me write?</p><p></p><p>It seems to me, that you attempt to belittle my programming abilities because you know little (languages) yourself. Not stating that as a fact... just what it seems. Why? Because the only languages that I could assume you know are Perl, and Bash scripting if you would count that. Would you look at that... 1-2. Peculiar, no?</p><p></p><p>Maybe you being "generous" (ignorant), came off as a little pretentious and assertive.</p><p>[doublepost=1479975722,1479974644][/doublepost]<strong>Serious answer now.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>If you're 100% dedicated to Computer Science like I am. If I had a do over I'd learn how a processor and other computer hardware components work (and how they work together) first, then learn Assembly, then learn C, and then work my way up to the higher level languages.</p><p></p><p>If you can discipline yourself to learn all of that, it'll make you a better programmer in the long run. You'll know better methods, you'll make better methods because you know how your code would translate to Assembly, and the better practices of that language. Not only will it increase performance of your applications due to your vast knowledge of computer hardware, it'll automatically make you a pro at reverse engineering software as well. And more...</p><p></p><p>If you learn a higher level language first, you're most likely going to quit and stick to that language if you try to go down a few notches too many because you'll get bored easier.</p><p></p><p>It would (by title) make you automatically a:</p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">System vulnerability analyst</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Embedded systems engineer</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Software engineer</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Software IT</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">Computer Scientist</li> </ul><p></p><p>many more I can list to get my point across but I'm starting to forget the names.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jaden, post: 390080, member: 51705"] And again, I know all of them competently except Perl as I chose not to learn it for now. Just to clarify, who are you to tell me what I know about languages you've never seen me write? It seems to me, that you attempt to belittle my programming abilities because you know little (languages) yourself. Not stating that as a fact... just what it seems. Why? Because the only languages that I could assume you know are Perl, and Bash scripting if you would count that. Would you look at that... 1-2. Peculiar, no? Maybe you being "generous" (ignorant), came off as a little pretentious and assertive. [doublepost=1479975722,1479974644][/doublepost][B]Serious answer now. [/B] If you're 100% dedicated to Computer Science like I am. If I had a do over I'd learn how a processor and other computer hardware components work (and how they work together) first, then learn Assembly, then learn C, and then work my way up to the higher level languages. If you can discipline yourself to learn all of that, it'll make you a better programmer in the long run. You'll know better methods, you'll make better methods because you know how your code would translate to Assembly, and the better practices of that language. Not only will it increase performance of your applications due to your vast knowledge of computer hardware, it'll automatically make you a pro at reverse engineering software as well. And more... If you learn a higher level language first, you're most likely going to quit and stick to that language if you try to go down a few notches too many because you'll get bored easier. It would (by title) make you automatically a: [LIST] [*]System vulnerability analyst [*]Embedded systems engineer [*]Software engineer [*]Software IT [*]Computer Scientist [/LIST] many more I can list to get my point across but I'm starting to forget the names. [/QUOTE]
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