What is the Best Programming Language to Learn in 2021
Brenda Michelle
Posted on December 5, 2020
Since starting my self-learning journey I have always asked and wondered what is the best programming language to learn or which should I start with. Many people wonder and ask which one guarantees a job. Which will get them into Google or any of the FAANG companies.
I do not have a computer science degree so I did not know what programming was I just assumed I learned a programming language and I would be a programmer. But oh boy was I wrong.
Programming languages are nothing but a tool. A programming language is to a programmer what a hammer is to a construction worker or a good knife is to a chef. Something that I have learned from other programmers that I follow, articles and books is that in order to be a good programmer one must be a problem solver.
You do not need to know a specific programming language to be a great programmer. You need to know what programming language to use and when to use them depending on the problem that you have.
We always hear programmers, developers, software engineers talk about bugs; and what are bugs? They are problems that they encounter in their code, their software, etc. Knowing what language, framework, library to use to fix the bug is what people hire you to do.
When you are working with a client and they ask for a website. They need a website for a reason. Maybe they are not getting enough clients, they are not making enough sales. These are problems that they have. As a programmer you need to think: “How can I fix these problems?” Once you know how to fix the problem and the steps you need to take (pseudo code) you can choose a programming language or framework that will help you fix the problem.
But where do you start?
If you are interested in programming or coding in general I suggest you think about what type of problems you want to fix. Do you want to help people gain more clients by creating websites? Do you want to fix a problem in your community with a mobile app? Do you like data and structure? There are many career paths within tech.
Make a list of all the things you like doing or that you liked doing when you were younger. Look for similar roles within the tech industry then look up which programming language is typically used within that specific role. You will then have a starting point. The more you learn and progress the more you will discover and add to your “Need to learn” list.
One last point to keep in mind is that a programmer is a life-long learner. You will always be learning new skills and tech stacks. Once you learn your 1st language, and get over that hurdle the rest will not be such a struggle.
This post is episode 2 of my #SelfTaughtSaturday Series where I will be posting tips, tricks, resources, anything and everything that can hopefully help anyone out there interested in self-learning to code.
If you are even a bit intrigued and are interested in learning to code lets connect! I would love to help in any way I can.
Photo by Windows on Unsplash
Posted on December 5, 2020
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