What's your Favourite Programming Language? (sound check Q) - Computerphile
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- čas přidán 17. 12. 2018
- For the past year, we've been asking this as a sound-check question. Here are the results!
Professor Graham Hutton (Haskell)
Joseph Best (BBC Basic)
David CX (Java / Python)
Lorraine Underwood (PHP)
Rob Miles (Python)
Charles Arthur (Python)
Sarah Spencer (Javascript)
Matt Denton (C)
Matt Lloyd (C/Python/PHP)
Ian Dickinson (C)
Tom Sheridan (Python)
Spencer Owen (Forth)
Rob Morley (PHP)
Professor Brian Kernighan (C/AWK/Python)
Rebecca Tickle (Javascript)
Dr Robert Smith (Common Lisp)
Aaron Jackson (Lisp / Matlab)
Professor David Brailsford (C)
Kate Green (HTML LOL)
Dr Steve Bagley (6502 Assembler)
Dr Max Wilson (Javascript)
Jason Fitzpatrick (Basic)
Professor Ross Anderson (Exim / Python)
Adrian Marinescu (Matlab)
Matt Phillips (68000 Assembler)
Dr Mike Pound (C#)
Professor Phil Moriarty (LabView)
/ computerphile
/ computer_phile
This video was filmed and edited by Sean Riley.
Computer Science at the University of Nottingham: bit.ly/nottscomputer
Computerphile is a sister project to Brady Haran's Numberphile. More at www.bradyharan.com
"Do you have a favorite programming language?"
"Si"
Loool
this does not have enough likes
1:18
"Si senior!"
😭😭😭😭😂
"If I try to write pseudocode I accidentally write python"
Python in a nutshell
I laughed so hard when I heard that, because I recently started learning python and yeah, it really does feel like that sometimes.
best comment ever
My computer science teacher recently said: “We'll be using python, it's a programming language where you write in english“
It's why I never understood the point of psuedocode. Why when you can just write code. I asked my profs this, I don't remember them ever giving me a straight answer.
@@theblackwidower I'd assume that it's to simplify the problem. I'd much rather worry about syntax after I figure out what I need my code to do. Maybe it's like writing a draft for a story without worrying about grammar?
my favourite programming language is powerpoint
lol
you can make a fake gui in powerpoint. And its easy!
This comment got me laughing out loud at work
It's more of a c# if you unzip the .ppt file
u got me hahaha
4:44 he was writing in MILF???
:D
MILFilter
yeah. it was invented by pHub
XD
...in a mail filter in Exim...
I just finished writing a compiler in C on this desert island.
*dies of thirst*
If you don't create your own universe from where to extract silicon, gold, etc to make your computer from scratch where you make your own programming language's compiler using machine code, you are a complete noob
@@Vicente75480
Lol, Assembly.
I don't think u died of thirst because 1) u commented here
3) how did u access CZcams on a deserted island?
@@tuneboyz5634 you must be fun in parties
Tune BoyZ, criticalthinking.out has been executed, ascension is imminent.
C: I have struct variable named Chair. I can sit on the Chair with the function sit().
C++: I have an object of a Chair class derived from the abstract base class Furniture with a virtual method called action() that I override to sit on the chair and it's being managed by the ChairHandler class.
C#: i have var named chair, but it has nothing in it so its trash
Function? Your allowed to write code without putting it in a class. Surely you need the irrelevant class for your one function.
...is what you do if you cannot produce proper structured code
If that's how you want to program in c++ sure
C++ makes more sense so you can do more actions on may types of things that are furniture like. Sofa + laydown or Bench + handstand
"6502 assembler" lol what a badass
6800
lol
I never even knew that existed
@@yungifez 6502 ASM is used for NES/Famicom programming
I tried learning that a few years ago. It's less complicated than you might think but like with any asm accomplishing anything meaningful takes a lot of effort
My favorite is minecraft command blocks, yes
mcfunction, is an actual language now
What about the language from Computercraft mod for Minecraft that's based on Lua?
@@youluvana I fear no man , but that thing , it scares me
HA! A *real* programmer woul build the computer from scratch in redstone, and program the whole thing directly in banks of machine code switches!
Ah yes, it came to me: RedPower2
111 things I noticed:
- JavaScript was chosen almost exclusively by the youth.
- A bit older (but not too experienced) people chose Python as first choice. Those who are even more older (a little more experienced) chose it as their second choice.
- PHP was chosen more than I expected.
- Java was mentioned less than I expected.
- Old folks knew what they meant when they chose C.
- Absolutely no mention of the newly popular languages like Go and Rust.
- Dr. Mike Pound chose C# and that's good enough for me!
- Javascript has a really nice abstraction level and is not statically typed, so ideally for simple web applications. And of course: It runs natively in your browser. That is also why I love Javascript. But please people: Use Javascript for what it is designed for: the Browser.
- Python: Really nice language to automate things. Little analyses etc. More in the direction of bash, but we all know, bash is ugly. So, you might want to use Python instead.
- PHP: Amazing template language for web-servers. But people tend to use it, for whatever reason, for way more. Same as Javascript: A bad trend. Misusing a language is always bad.
- Java: When you need interoperability, like for Android apps, the jvm is an amazing tool for it.
- C: If you are on an Island, you want to have C. The only language you can do low and high-level stuff. But the best: You can write your compilers for the other languages :) Also one of my favorite languages. Okay, I also really like to do web stuff: So, I also love Javascript.
True, Go & Rust wasn't mentioned. I think we will see more and more Rust & Go in the future.
@@PhilippBlum javascript can be used in backend environment using nodejs; nodejs is the best @ async event dealing
@@r3d0c I don't recommend Javascript for backend Software. The V8 is going to be faster & faster, but Javascript is a scripting language and I would stick to its features. It is designed for the frontend, to create interactive frontends. ES5 has only callbacks, that's it. ES6 has Future & Promises. So has Java etc. Javascript doesn't have a nice concurrency model. You can use WebWorker, but I would say that is even worse than Threading in Java. Go has a nice concurrency model. Java & Scala have at least a de facto standard with Actors.
@@PhilippBlum you won't be making backends in anything other than python or javascript if you're not 25 or older
@Meta d Why Javascript for mobile apps and not Java and Objective C for iOS?
Everyone on their own language: "I can do anything with it!!!"
Yep! It's almost like those Church-Turing guys were on to something! 😛
It's such a redundant argument. If you couldn't, it wouldn't be much of a programming language
Then you ask for performant code and then it's no longer "the right tool for the job".
Here is a phrase I thought I would never hear: "Stylistic: Java"
He probably is talking about expresivity when it comes to large code, due to the way java fits without a problem the GoF Design Patterns
Nothing says "stylistic" like having to write 10 lines of weird code for what other languages do in two lines intuitively.
@@azaria_phd And do it slower
@@azaria_phd I think you should look into what modern Java looks like. It also sounds like you've got an awful lot of prejudice, because that's really only true in very specific cases even with versions like 1.6.
@@sebastiangudino9377 Slower compared to what exactly? It's barely slower than anything else. Sure, write code in C or C++ and compile it and you have better performance, but that's honestly about it.
What is your favorite programming language?
-HTML
*Intense latghter from every corner of the university*
Hey... I recognise you.
"He's probably joking, right?"
The worst of all, is that once, my networking theacher said "HTML is a programming language", and i felt the pain going through all my body
I hate HTML, but I love PHP, and hate JAVASCRIPT too... Is that something unusual?
As annoying as it is, I can't help but think optimistically about a programming language for basic... people.
My favourite programming language is Solder
Don't forget the Flux!
That's not a programming language, sir.
Works for me
That must certainly be an "assembly" type language.
Disassembler :D
A: "What's your favorite programming language?"
B: "eerm.. English?"
A: "What?"
B: "..but i'm a *Typist* "
Did you mean _python_
Lots of typography used to be done with wordperfect formatting commands (which after Microsoft bought the competitor became one of the many buried functions in Word that you need to know how to find if you want to use). Though I understand LaTeX is preferred in academia these days
@@IONATVS I mean, latex and word are different products for doing different things, they are not a replacement for each other
@@sebastiangudino9377 wordperfect formatting code != Word, while they are included as a background feature in versions of word, and originally as a major selling point of the WordPerfect word processor, they are not a word processor, they are a fully-fledged formatting scripting language that you could edit directly to gain complete control of your layout--just like LaTeX, just with a different syntax and some smaller differences in featureset.
@@IONATVS Fair point!
3:12 love how he betters the question and the reporter just answers it.
I expected him to give an appropriate answer to such a question, and he didn't disappoint me at all.
My guy using the 6502 assembler language 😂
It'd be my favorite purely because I made a 6502 computer on breadboards, dammit
More basic than BASIC !
3:20 but there's plenty of sea at a desert island
But either way you can definitely enjoy a cup of java :^)
@@Outfrost ... as you type out your script...
Yes there's plenty of sea, plus ... plus, there's also lot's of fresh air.
I just solder my code with the proper gates and a little battery.
Makes you really plan ahead
The fact that C++ was never mentioned in this video brings me great sadness.
And Rust
@@carlosmspk I get the absence of rust, it's still very new in the big scheme of things.
But C++ I am surprised by. The low and high level argument of C is even more true with C++. Unlike what the others claim that they can do whatever they want in their language, C and by extension C++ are the only languages where that's actually true. Most interpreters and compilers of those other languages are all written in either C or C++, which to me just means just using the language means you can't do "everything" in said language. You're already using another.
Not being a self hosting language disqualifies it from being able to do "everything" in it.
@@nextlifeonearth Well, when I say that "I can do anything with Python" for instance, I'm referring to how I can assign any class to a list (vector) and Python allows it at runtime, how I can return whatever I want from a function. Overall it's much easier to prototype, that might be what they meant with "I can do anything" although some of the languages they mentioned don't really seem be this case I'm talking about.
Yeah, Rust is new, but it is also "trending" so I expected some of them to say something like that or Go, or Swift
ikr
They are academics who probably work on their own tools or a small team at best. They don't build large scale systems.
My favourite language :
Stack Overflow
Copy Pasta Overflow
I like how you can tell what that person does for a living by what language they specify; MatLab is a Math or Physics guy, JS is front end developer, BASIC is a computer geek from the 90s, C is an embedded systems guy or COMPE/CS Professor.
Also C or Visual Basic
@ambassador python for data scientist or machine learning/ deep learning person
And Forth people are "those people who always bring up Forth".
And what kind of person is 68000 assembler?
@@tykjpelk Amiga/ST/Mac/MegaDrive people
This comment thread is going to keep me going for hours :)
Michael Pound subscribed and waiting for content on your channel
i wonder why xd
I must say I was happy to find out that out of these people you are the one I enjoy watching the most and as I was watching no one was saying c# and then here you come.
How can I spend few hours with you, just listening you explaining something random... Music to my ears
Cool, the guy who choose the correct answer - c pound (c#) 😀
I got very happy once I finally heard someone say C#
I also got very happy watching this whole video, it was as if I was being introduced to the world's diverse cultures but in programming form!
All the old guys choosing C, wise men they are
Yes indeed
C will outlive every other language
@@GameCyborgCh it will
Nobody chose the spaghetti C++, wise men, everyone are.
@@shambhav9534 Try writing a big generic system in C instead of C++, before judging it.
Me: "Man, nobody across the great pond likes C#, it's not been mentioned once."
Dr. Mike Pound: "C#"
Me: "Hell yeah!"
I actually did the Success Kid pose IRL when he said C#. It also made me super happy it was he who said it, since the videos featuring him tend to be the ones I'm the most interested in.
Same!
Exactly!
C# or JavaScript would be my number two
Don't take it as an approval that its a viable language. The .net platform was built by MS and its development will always depend on what their interests are
Precisely
The first language I ever learned, back in high school (1972), was FORTRAN. Punch cards via a data link to the IBM 360/50 at the Board of Education downtown.
The first language I ever earned a living with was BAL (IBM 360/370 assembler).
Then I spent a year as a COBOL programmer, but I don't like to talk about that.
Then I spent the next 40 years writing in C. Alongside C, I used awk, lex, and yacc a fair amount. And shell scripting, of course.
I've dabbled with C++, Java, and Python, but I keep going back to C. It's definitely my favorite.
I have yet to find a single person who likes to talk about their time in COBOL.
@@FarukAFeres Oh, I've heard lots of stories, just no happy ones. (My best friend's parents were both COBOL developers at a large insurance company.)
@@fletcherreder6091 Cobol was the thing here from 90 to few years ago... delphi is still a thing these days...
@@FarukAFeres People I went to school with are currently doing *active* COBOL development *in 2019*. Sometimes I wonder what's wrong with the US....
@@fletcherreder6091 i got some legacy projects in ASP classic so I can guess whats is like to have a legacy to carry on...
3:40 I remember seeing a question on yahoo answers:
"I want to make blockchain in html"
sadly I can't find it anymore.
lol
i think that would require some tags, in a chain maybe.
i hope he figured it out
LabView makes spaghetti code look like actual spaghetti
I have ptsd with simulink and labview
@@theodorechandra8450 did my masters thesis with LabVIEW, glad it's over. I left a working mess behind which is impossible even for me to debug after 1 week or two.
Max is the same way with spaghetti code.
Yeah, LabVIEW is the best invention for no one
If your labview looks like spaghetti, you're doing it wrong.
Excel is Turing complete, let's use that.
I prefer x86 mov only.
Excel doesn’t have loops and uses way too much overhead.
@@evannibbe9375 Google Sheets allows recursion to a specified depth, controllable in the sheet's properties ─ so let's all use that for commercial projects ;-D
PowerPoint, Minecraft and Html with Css are also turing complete, let's combine those 4 to create the ultimative language! ^.^
@@johannbauer2863 Boom!
Dr Mike Pound, my man. C#, represent! lol
C# and C++ are missing a lot
@@Chris-ye7ip they are missing flaws
@@iz5808 As much as I love C#, there are two big features that other languages (like C++) have that I miss. 1) multiple inheritance, 2) the switch statement test variable cannot be a string.
The easiest language to debug was C, but the most difficult language to learn was C.
Also, as the project grows, it seems that all languages are difficult.
If you don't have a lot of food, it's easy to use a fork and knife, but I think it's hard to eat if you have more food and a mix of different cultures.
I'm sorry I don't know English well.
I always say C is an easy language since it's a simple language. The hard part when it comes to C is actually using it for something.
6:00 "Anyway, here's Wonderwall"
Not a single C++. Man.
raw beautiful C.
I guess if you don't mind about C++, you can as well move to C
But lots of php instead. Really concerning ._.
As a C# man, I feel sad about.the lack of C# in there
Talk about stylistically java. Very scary.
Scratch! of course!
have to upvote, this was my entry into programming as a teen :)
of*
@@bentton7311 of course! (thanks, edited it)
I actually like to use LEGO EV3
Scratch is smalltalk
For me its Typescript, C# and Haskell (even though I haven't built anything big/real with it, I just find it really interesting and a lot of fun to write. It's been really great to use for this recursive algorithms class I'm taking!)
So far, C++ is my favorite. It doesn’t deserve the bad reputation that some people like to give it.
It’s actually a really sensible language that can do just about everything.
If I were stranded on an island with only one programming language, C++ would be my language of choice. And if I got tired of it, I could use it to write a new programming language.
I started exploring C++ mainly because of OOP and why is c++ getting hate?
smh use rust
@@varun_4125 c++ is full of bloat
I C++ is getting hate because of its complexity. It has lots of legacy features, its backwards compatible with C and some of the things are more complicated than they should be. For example you have 6 or so different kinds of initializations all of them have different rules and some things are undefined but most of the popular compilers support it so its fine and yeah... On top of that STL was written by someone who tried to make it most unreadable possible. Even though I still like it because i like pain ;)
Yes, that’s some pain!! C creates a
little pain too!
Huh I'm surprised no one said C++. I feel like it's a versatile version of C given that you can do low level programming and higher level object oriented programming with it fairly easily.
saame
C is better
@@josephmarx4695 Maybe, but i mean, c is better than everything else
Danilo Marques, true
How is c better than c++?
Professor Kernighan likes C? I couldn't imagine why.
You missed the AWK part (he created it). :)
@@xmtxx I can recall writing a couple of small things with awk but those regular expressions are really dense to decipher. Not as intentional a "write-only" language as Malbolge but I'd hate to have to pick up anything like that today.
@@xmtxx I tried doing something in AWK once. Once.
@@xmtxx Well, he was one of the authors. He's the "k" in the name.
I love Commodore BASIC, I have many happy memories of programming my first computer in that language.
I actually love the variety of the answers
5:38 finally. I love C# and I was so sad nobody mentioned it
@Kernels oh my this is the first time someone found me on youtube, I'm famous bois
Everyone who said Java has never used C#.
Was curious if anyone would say it, scrolled down to the comments and found the timestamp. So glad to see it's Dr. Mike Pound!
I got discouraged as well, C# is my absolute favorite
C# is easy to write but the downgrade in performance is just too much. It also gets worse to write as the program gets larger due to the nature of OOP
A: what's your favourite programming language and ..
B: html becau..
A: and you're fired
.
lol
Yeah it's not really a programming language and
@@ericl8743 woooooosh
@@user-zb8tq5pr4x I get the joke here. I was surprised the people in the video were saying HTML
I'll choose XML!
The guy with awk for day to day stuff, python when awk doesn't scale well, and C for serious stuff is my spirit human
I’ve never used Swift but when it was released i went through the entire learning guide and just loved it
Leave it to Mike Pound to drop some love for C#
Great reactionary video. The neverending battle between nostalgia, competency and usefulness.
I love how when Brian Kernighan is asked (1:58) he responds with "I have said in the past that if I were on a desert island (...)" and when Professor Brailsford is asked (3:10) he says "I think a better question is if you could only take one programming language to a desert island (...)".
Pascal: my native programming language. Nice to see the Lazarus IDE and fpc still around. C is a close second.
pascal is very underrated
Machine code, anything else is just laziness.
I like to rearrange electrons myself actually.
i manually measure individual qubits. and if i'm not satisfied with the result i entangle the bastards.
I use butterflies.
And laziness is useful
I only support Netscape v1.0
My favorite is Holy C
This!!
God's Temple must be kept clean.
Temple OS will live forever
Rest In Peace Terry
@@dilass He died?
Of the ones I'm currently proficient in: C#, but when I finally learn Rust and some form of Lisp, they might become my favourites. I really like what I've heard of them.
5:39 This is my man. And the one with 6502 Assembler
Favorite language: Bash
It's the only one I know at the moment and it's like I'm an orchestrator at a symphony!
:(){ :|:; };:
Even though I really like JS Bash is so lovable to mr
im exaclty like u, right now!
Start C++ now, quit wasting your time on bash
@@David-nn1cf i have the R&K book, im thinking about starting C.
C: learn everything about programming language and build your logic.
Python: include **** job done xD
Python doesn't have a keyword "include"
import stuff
stuff.doStuff()
stuff done XD
@Evi1M4chine I certainly don't advocate the awful C-syntax and semantics, but "the point of programming" could be many very different things, including (re-) inventing a slightly better wheel. It's totally up to the programmer, or the one that hired him.
I just love using the C, Go pair. C lets me do whatever I want with no interference and Go keeps heavy safety restrictions.
Ruby, expressive, concise, fun. And like many of these cats say about their favorite language, I can think in it.
Yes! The C# guy. Also .Net core is cross platform!
To the ignorant people who think C# == proprietary and patented: .Net Core is FOSS, Microsoft cannot sue for the use of .Net or .Net Core. 小林恭司 describes it in more detail.
It's not. Mono is not fully compatible and there are patent concerns.
@@dreamyrhodes mono is actually owned by Microsoft, they acquired it with the switch to .net core 3 years ago. Net core is also open source unlike net framework
@@NiekSchoemaker Doesn't change the problem of patents in the code.
@@NiekSchoemaker That doesn't change the fact, that C# is proprietary and has patent issues.
@@dreamyrhodes .Net Core is cross platform, what are you on about? Explain to my linux server running my .Net Core site developed on my Mac...
"What's your favourite programming language?"
"*HTML*"
Markup language but not to program 😂🤣
but html5 is turing complete
@@DerFailer care to explain what that means, for an absolute noob such as myself?
@@Pirosbor
Okay we need some definitions.
"Turing Completeness-
In computability theory, a system of data-manipulation rules (such as a computer's instruction set, a programming language, or a cellular automaton) is said to be Turing complete " -Wikipedia
So a programming language is turing complete.
There is a rule called Rule 110 it is known to be Turing complete. If you can implement That rule in a language it is also turing complete and there for a programming language.
Someone implemented Rule 110 in HTML+CSS.
So my comment was not correct HTML+CSS is turing complete and together a programming language.
FIRED😂
My favorites are C# for Web Apps, Web APIs & Cross-Plattform Apps, Python for AI stuff and Maths and C as well as C++ for low level stuff.
C++ isn't only for low-level stuff (That's C and assembly) C++ is a little close to the computer but is considered a high-level language, just on the lower side.
Python can do everything... slowly. My favourite is C++ for serious stuff, but I also love JavaScript for goofing around.
I like C the most, because it makes it look like you know what you're doing
Throw in an overflow here and an overflow there. Bam done.
@@TheBodgybrothers Believe it or not, overflows are one of the rarely encountered problems in C. The reason people don't use it is because it's cheaper and faster not to.
@@somedude4122 I code in c daily and see overflows a lot. So yeah, memory issues are still a thing if not managed correctly. Most security vulns work on overflows. The latest nintendo switch root used an overflow.
@@TheBodgybrothers Ah, I was thinking about integer overflows. You still shouldn't be dealing with stack overflows. I code embedded stuff and drivers, but overflows are very rare and I've only had it happen a couple of times in infinite loops.
C was the language I used during the most hardcore productive part of my programming career and I love the fact that its syntax has influenced so many other languages today. C on a PDP 11 was such a well-crafted seamless match in a way that probably can't ever happen again.
I've just started BASIC, and I love it.
I'm glad to see there's some love for PHP out there!
The number of people who answered PHP is disturbing
The number of people saying C++ in this comment section is disturbing...
The number of people, who answered Brainfuck is shocking
It literally made me stop watching because I couldn't take it ._.
The number of people who think PHP even qualifies as a programming language is disturbing.
@@jolynnathan8475 lol you're right
Why did Java get glasses???? Because it couldn't C#
I misread that as "why did Java get classes" at first, I was rather confused.
Stop
@@animowany111 and why did it get classes? Because it couldn't C
:o)
I'll give your a C+.. for that;
@@Muhammad-sx7wr You mean C++ for that.
I am back to this topic, and have to change to javascript.. had not really tried it before I answered last time, but boy is that something else!. Love it so much!.
I also really like javascript. Typescript too.
5:28 68000 assembly language ! At last, a real programmer ! ! !
Mine is C++... I'll go home.
No, my fav too. C++ promoters unite!
@Arsalan Anwari I think you don't know about the D programming language.
@Arsalan Anwari B is a thing or was a thing I think.
@@dasemmiyogurt6288 It's useless though
C++ for me too though it has many dark spots.
I love my low level languages. I work with embedded microprocessors down at the hardware level. So of course, C is my favorite language. You have absolute control of your memory management and can do a fair bit of optimization. I love pointers! And of course, if you need even more speed, you can always throw in an ASM routine here or there.
But if I'm just goofing around in a Windows/Linux enviornment, I will normally pick C# or Python.
Very interesting. My favourite has changed over time from basic to ml to python.
For a long time C was my favourite, beating C++, python, javascript, c#, etc... sometimes by narrow margins. But after 15 years it has been unseated by Lua, a language I only learned recently. It's simple, extremely well-designed, as performant as you can expect from a scripting language, plus it's super easy to write C functions and call them in Lua to plug any gaps in the existing libraries. All you C heads out there have to give it a try, I promise it's worth it!
I don't get the "I like x, because you can do anything with it" argument...
I mean, that's literally the whole point of a general-purpose language...
True. But what other language is as general purpose in practice as Python? Maybe JavaScript.
@@pthomasgarcia C#, C, C++, Go, Java, Rust, Kotlin, and literally every general purpose language
Again: that's the whole point
But maybe what they were trying to say is that they are more familiar to some specific language, and because of that, they can do anything they want with it, just because they know how to do it in this language. (sorry for my bad english ;-;)
@@Krokoklemmee Sure, you can write a script in C++ with some library, but who has time for that? Python is easily more convenient in this respect and plenty of others ... in practice.
Edit: So the caveat to settle the matter is that you can do anything with Python EASILY.
@@pthomasgarcia js is more general purpose than python.
I can (and have) sat down at a random pc, opened a text editor ad developed a small project without having to install or configure anything. Just a browser is all you need and you can do data visualisation, ui and (basic) computing more easily than with anything else.
I'm an embedded developer. To get python running i need to buy a fast CPU, make a complex multilayer PCB, do the DDR3 layout, compile a linux distro and install the interpreter.
To get C running i hook up a JTAG probe and hit "run".
What about the compiler?
You probably want to take a look at micropython !
But didn’t you have to install the “run” button? And connect it to ... whatever it’s connected to?
Or load a 25Kb Forth interactive compiler and start prototyping via serial connection.
And that's why I like Python's C-API.
The title should have been "Why is Python your favourite language?"
Mine for work:
C#
Javascript
Python
Matlab
For teaching:
C
C++
I love Java for its organization and in depth APIs. Been leaning more towards Python these days though.
Man Python is awesome.
C# is awesome, very elegant and it just keeps getting better.
1:19 Nevermind his programming language preference. Can I have a go in that machine behind him?!
C, Python and VHDL. I have written a lot of C code for a processor written in VHDL that was tested with Python and it just stuck. Python is definitely my language of choice and it can easily be extended with Cython or regular CPython extensions if it's not fast enough.
When your stranded on a island: C or C++. Favorite: C# with out a doubt - its statically typed, has loads of libraries, and can do low level memory editing as well. Seems I like any 'C" languages ...
Does that mean you like Java too?
On daily basis: Javascript (flexibility, productivity, community). On an lsland: C (Better to have something strong to deal with low level).
Omg, with 80-90% of them you could just look at the person and guess more or less the correct answer. The first assembler guy was a big surprise for me though.
I'm glad somebody mentioned Forth. I'm not sure I'd want to use it for anything in reality, but it is an interesting language to program in.
Finally, somebody mentioned C# towards the end of the video!
1)C
2)C++
3)Python
✌️
the ultimalte order
1)C
2)R
3)C++
fixed
@@arminkaric9409 yea R is not a "real" programming language my dude 🤪
Tushar Sadhwani well more than html
4) GOTO 1
My favourite programming language is C and P:
Copy & Paste
Befunge is my favorite. Kotlin is my favorite for being slightly more practical, C++ is what I use most.
"Python because you can do everything with it" (very slowly)
Everything means you can even turn bottlenecks into fast C code when you need it (automatically and optionally statically typed with Cython).and use that compiled C code for the parts that were too slow ;-)
@@bestdani I agree, Python is fast when you don't use it and you use C.
Python: Write the program in 15 minutes, run it for 3 hours
C: Write the program in 3 hours, run it for 15 minutes
@@ricardopieper11 C is not the only language other than Python. Also, Do you usually run your programs only once?
@@M4nu3l90F it's just a bad joke coming from someone who likes python :) speed isn't everything, and for that even pypy works very well.
Happy to see the Matlab/C# love
Matlab would be nice if it weren't so expensive or crash half the time. Fortunately, Julia replaced it in our labs. Definitely agree with the rest though.
@@Croxmata There is always GNU Octave if you like Matlab.
I love Pascal because it was my first programming language in college, way back when. Today, I use HTML5 and CSS3 for my website.
As a CS student, I learned a wee bit of JavaScript to start with, then moved on to C++ with a moderate piece of SQL and a small bit of assembly. I'm still learning C++, I've gone off on my own and learned some of the basics of vanilla C, and I'm learning Python right now.
Of all I've learned so far, though, I think I prefer C because it is very explicit: It's very straightforward what types I'm working with, which makes it easier for me to read my own code and build on it. I like some features of C++, though, and Python is excellent for hammering out powerful code in a short amount of time without having to worry as much about data types.
I'd say it's C#, in terms of syntax at least. Might be Python if it wasn't for the dynamic typing and lack of proper closures. Just add those brackets to Python and I'm all in
Many people like python because of those two things, and not in spite of them, so I don't think it will ever change.
Let's just say that python reads and writes a lot more like spoken language, so it appeals to many. Adding brackets and whatnot would undermine this very principle.
Ultimately, it's preferences.
They wanted some super light code... so the emptiness structures it. There's probably not going to be brackets, ever. It's a scripting language anyways.
I really like the lack of "clutter" in Python which makes it my favorite programming language syntax wise. But I'm equally fine with the brackets in all the C syntax like programming languages (like C, C++, PHP, Javascript).
python is executable pseudo code
I don't get the brackets and semicolons thing at all. All the style guides for these languages say it's bad style to have multiple statements on one line, and it's bad style to not indent your code. If you're always putting newlines between your statements and always indenting whenever you use brackets, which you should be, then the semicolons and brackets are redundant. If they're not useful, and they're certainly not beautiful, throw them out
My favourite programming language is C++.
Александр Алексеев until you get to seg faults and memory leaks, and then you would wish c++ is more like java
@@isaacng123456789 in the beginning that can be an issue but as soon as you wrap your head around that concept and witness the performance that is possible with C++ you never want to use another language, at least that happened to me
@@_PsychoFish_ E.g. Rust has roughly the same performance as C++, but with much nicer ecosystem and a much smarter compiler. I'm not advocating against C++ though, just don't like it anymore.
Agree, love it. And they are really driving the language forward with C++ 11, 14 and 17.
As long as you’re using 11 or new.
I agree with 68k assembly, one of my favourite processors to write for. I’ve done IBM 370, Z80, C167, PIC, HC05, HC08, HC11, 9S12X, and 6502 assembly as well as microcode for a few DSP hardware platforms (custom hardware, not an off the shelf DSP). 68k is well thought out, to me it resembles IBM 370 assembly. But for a desert island language? I agree with those that said ‘C’ and for the same reasons. But I really enjoy assembly. I do not really enjoy programming anything higher than ‘C’, and I quite dislike programming user interfaces, I prefer programming when the user interface is a driver pressing on the gas pedal and the rest of the system includes a few dozen sensors and actuators under the hood.
Assembly, just nice and simple instructions which are essentially the same for all processors
bmp72 ive never used assembly, can you tell me more in detail why you like it?
Cut and paste is the new programming language
lol wht
Lol
Cut and paste is the (not in the gof book mentioned) pattern. The language is called stackoverflow 😂😂😂
My personal favorite language is Common Lisp, mainly because I find it very elegant to write and easy to extend.
C is a close second, because I like doing low-level stuff.
lol lazy, i write straight up binary
Nice video. I was curious about what IDE and OS do they use??
Having done BASIC, Z80/8088/68000 assembler, Pascal, Modula-2, C, C++, PHP, Postscript, Java, JavaScript, TypeScript, Perl, (ba)sh, csh, awk and probably some others I'm forgetting: most definitely Java. I've dabbled a bit in Haskell, but not enough to have a firm opinion.