Programming
Get insights from 882 questions on Programming, answered by students, alumni, and experts. You may also ask and answer any question you like about Programming
Follow Ask QuestionQuestions
Discussions
Active Users
Followers
New answer posted
8 years ago
Scholar-Level 17
This will depend on what exactly you plan to study. If you want a career in coding then you must demonstrate good programming skills. However, not every IT area requires coding skills. You can be a good analyst as well among others. Find out your strengths, your career plans and interest and apply to a relevant program.
New answer posted
8 years agoContributor-Level 6
Being a Java J2EE developer for more than 3 years, what I understood from my experience is that, there are still wider/ larger scope for these technologies.
If you are pretty good in the most basic concepts of Java (abstraction, polymorphism, inheritance, naming conventions etc. ) you would find it easier to learn and grasp other technologies, which is an added advantage for Java developers.
However, once you are inside an organisation as a Java developer, you would find too many Java resources surrounding you ( which is a bitter truth obviously :) ). So, to stand out of the crowd, it would be always helpful to learn or to to get into
New answer posted
8 years agoContributor-Level 6
These are some of your options today as a JavaScript developer.
HTML, CSS, and JavaScript/JQuery: You can make stand alone websites or websites that connect to a back-end, which will be handled by a separate team. You might have to work on frameworks such as Bootstrap and Semantic UI (which make your job a lot easier once mastered).
Angular/ Backbone/ React/ Vue/ Ember: All of these are JavaScript frameworks/libraries for building single page, highly interactive websites. Consider these as an icing on top of everything mentioned in the previous point. All of these solve the same problem differently, and you will have to work with what
New answer posted
8 years ago
Scholar-Level 17
If you're still in grade school, you can give yourself a huge head start by teaching yourself. You can start with languages like C, C+, JAVA, UNIX and Shell Scripting.
Seek an internship-
Many software engineer students work as interns while they
New answer posted
8 years agoContributor-Level 6
Why Aptech -
Up-to-date & industry-relevant courses:
Expert faculty
Aptech organizes regular events like Techno Minds, placement workshops, job fairs, seminars, etc. to encourage student-industry interaction & to prepare them for facing job interviews.
New answer posted
8 years agoContributor-Level 6
Head First Java, 2nd Edition - OReilly Media
Thinking in Java (4th Edition)
Java: A Beginners Guide (Sixth Edition) by Herbert Schildt
Introduction to Programming in Java by Robert Sedgewick
Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming with Java by C.Thomas wu
Java in a Nutshell
Beginning Programming with Java For Dummies, 4th Edition by Barry Burd
"The Java Programming Language" by Ken Arnold,James, Gosling,David Holmes.
Core Java Volume I Fundamentals (10th Edition) by Cay S. Horstmann
Java How To Program (late objects) by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel
Effective Java (2nd Edition): Joshua Bloch
Java Performance: Charlie Hunt,
New answer posted
8 years ago
Scholar-Level 18
Assembly Language is most important, but rudimentary basic language was developed to programme microprocessors. It made it's presence felt long back in 1949. Though, newer versions have been released, it remains widely used even today and as a result, opportunities for employment for trained professionals is never ending one.It is actually not one, but collection of different languages and one must study all of these to have high probability to get a job. There is another aspect also that we should look into. What would be prospects in future? Of course, nobody can say anything with certainty. But, one can surely make educated gu
New answer posted
8 years agoContributor-Level 6
New answer posted
8 years agoTaking an Exam? Selecting a College?
Get authentic answers from experts, students and alumni that you won't find anywhere else
Sign Up on ShikshaOn Shiksha, get access to
- 66k Colleges
- 1.2k Exams
- 703k Reviews
- 1850k Answers
