Which Programming Language Pays the Best? Probably Python

DEAD7

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What programming language will earn you the biggest salary over the long run? According to Quartz, which relied partially on data compiled by employment-analytics firm Burning Glass and a Brookings Institution economist, Ruby on Rails, Objective-C, and Python are all programming skills that will earn you more than $100,000 per year. But salary doesn't necessarily correlate with popularity. Earlier this year, for example, tech-industry analyst firm RedMonk produced its latest ranking of the most-used languages, and Java/JavaScript topped the list, followed by PHP, Python, C#, and C++/Ruby. Meanwhile, Python was the one programming language to appear on Dice's recent list of the fastest-growing tech skills, which is assembled from mentions in Dice job postings. Python is a staple language in college-level computer-science courses, and has repeatedly topped the lists of popular programming languages as compiled by TIOBE Software and others. Should someone learn a language just because it could come with a six-figure salary, or are there better reasons to learn a particular language and not others?
 

Chris.B

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Python is more user friendly.
It's the future I'm afraid. It's what php used to be.

Almost every new scientific program written these days is in python.

Most people don't know they can pay only 1-3K to learn this at a community college and go on to make 6 figures.

No degree required.
 

aliG

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Python is more user friendly.
It's the future I'm afraid. It's what php used to be.

Almost every new scientific program written these days is in python.

Most people don't know they can pay only 1-3K to learn this at a community college and go on to make 6 figures.

No degree required.

ARE YOU SERIOUS? ONLY 1-3k? God damn. I got to look into this.
 
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Python is more user friendly.
It's the future I'm afraid. It's what php used to be.

Almost every new scientific program written these days is in python.

Most people don't know they can pay only 1-3K to learn this at a community college and go on to make 6 figures.

No degree required.


Old Developer told me that Python was catching a new buzz....This was like 2002...Made me go out and buy a beginners guide. I never cracked it open.....

:mjcry:
 

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What programming language will earn you the biggest salary over the long run? According to Quartz, which relied partially on data compiled by employment-analytics firm Burning Glass and a Brookings Institution economist, Ruby on Rails, Objective-C, and Python are all programming skills that will earn you more than $100,000 per year. But salary doesn't necessarily correlate with popularity. Earlier this year, for example, tech-industry analyst firm RedMonk produced its latest ranking of the most-used languages, and Java/JavaScript topped the list, followed by PHP, Python, C#, and C++/Ruby. Meanwhile, Python was the one programming language to appear on Dice's recent list of the fastest-growing tech skills, which is assembled from mentions in Dice job postings. Python is a staple language in college-level computer-science courses, and has repeatedly topped the lists of popular programming languages as compiled by TIOBE Software and others. Should someone learn a language just because it could come with a six-figure salary, or are there better reasons to learn a particular language and not others?

these articles and their salary numbers that go with them are mostly nonsense. in general salary depends on the domain, developer skillset, and demand rather than the language. for instance a python developer in quantitative finance can easily make upwards of 150K but a developer using python for generic web apps would barely see 70K. overall skillset would guarantee you the highest salary over the long run or knowing some esoteric language like K, erlang, or programming FGPA's that only a few developers know instead of python which would have thousands of code academy people piling onto soon
 
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newworldafro

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I asked about Python a few months ago, cause I want to take some classes sooner than later. http://www.thecoli.com/threads/usa-...ut-dont-get-hired.258115/page-3#post-10469988

Hopefully this means I'm on the right path ..... :lupe:

Let me ask this question, I don't see myself doing a 9 - 5 for Python right away (but who knows :whoo:), I would much rather make that consulting money on the side. Work solo or on a team for clients, but not doing every day. Is that difficult to do if you don't have any 9 - 5 experience, or does it just depend on your skill level? or the type of project you're working on??:patrice:
 
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semtex

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That's cool but doesn't mean there are lots of Python jobs out there
 

unit321

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Do a search on monster.com and dice.com for python jobs.
There are a lot of different programming languages and applications. You can't be a master of them all. I've focused on Java. There's always a need for Java developers.
 

88m3

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Why don't you guys create your own programming language? Are you lazy?
 
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