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Showing posts from May, 2016

Present and Future Benefits (aka activities that provide present and future enjoyment) for me

Finding the job that makes you happy ---> coding or owning a business -must learn the core languages: Phyton, Java, and C++ (object-orientated) in that order -daily coding problem solving (?) + 45 minutes -associate with augmented reality, virtual reality, and mobile apps iOS or Android Making money Being a leader + when with people Eating Chipotle or other healthy foods + 3 times a day, 10-30 minutes each but can go minimum an hour with friends Supersizing at least 3 items a week, every other day + 22 minutes of running + 2 minutes of push ups + 2 minutes of sit ups Spending time with friends (when you can at some point) Reading fun books or material online (all the time, constantly learning, curious or hungry for novel information) Playing video games to boost creativity and incease reaction or response time Mental stimulation of the beneficial kind Investing in stocks + 3 hours a day or NYSE open at 8:30 AM central time to 3:30 PM closing Move to California and live

https://www.quora.com/Which-one-should-I-learn-first-C-or-C++

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Which one should I learn first - C or C++? I am very much proficient in Python but I've never learned either C or C++ and I am confused. Answer Request Follow 73 Comment 1 Share Downvote 34 Answers Nathan F Yospe ,  C++ standards expert, fluent in Python, Fortran, Matlab, C, Java, C# 26.5k  Views  •  Nathan  has  120+ answers  in  Computer Programming Strong disagreement with all of the C proponents here. C++11 first. Learning C first teaches you a number of bad habits and archaic practices, and, like coming from a pure Java background, stands a good change, if you are not sufficiently flexible, of turning you into a terrible C++ programmer. I'm a bit of a hypocrite here - I learned FORTRAN and C long before I learned C++, and the C++ I learned first was a much less mature language than the current one, especially in t