If you are looking to advance your career or considering who to hire in 2016, you may be looking at particular skills sets, including coding. But what languages should you target? One programming language instructor has made a discovery in Google Trends: Starting in Nov. 2015, more people were searching for "learn Python" than were searching for "learn Java" for the first time ever. That's when those two points converged as Python continued to rise and Java edged ever so slightly upward over the last few years, the instructor reports.
"Looking at the last 5 years, the demand to 'learn python' was constantly rising," Oli Moser wrote. "Python has already become the number 1 programming course for beginners in many universities years ago. The main reason for this is simple: Python is simple. I think it has the simplest and most intuitive syntax from all programming languages."
The author goes on to recommend that those who aspire to big data positions learn this particular language.
I got this article from information week
Article is written by Jessica Davis
by Harshal Mandhare
"Looking at the last 5 years, the demand to 'learn python' was constantly rising," Oli Moser wrote. "Python has already become the number 1 programming course for beginners in many universities years ago. The main reason for this is simple: Python is simple. I think it has the simplest and most intuitive syntax from all programming languages."
The author goes on to recommend that those who aspire to big data positions learn this particular language.
I got this article from information week
Article is written by Jessica Davis
by Harshal Mandhare
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