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David Brown <david.brown@hesbynett.no> wrote:You wished to fine C rated at number three on a list, without much concern about the relevance of the list to anything? That's an odd wish, but I'm happy it was fulfilled for you!John Forkosh wrote:Yeah, I guess "C is #3" was just unlikely wishful thinkingI came across>
https://www.fastcompany.com/91169318/
where I was quite surprised, and very happily so,
to see C listed as #3 on its list of
"Top 10 most common hard skills listed in 2023"
(scroll about halfway down for that list). Moreover,
C++ doesn't even make it anywhere in that top-10 list.
So is that list sensible??? I'd personally be delighted
if so, but I'm suspicious it may just be wishful thinking
on my part, and some kind of goofiness on the list's author.
As far as I see, the article is about what people put on their CV's -
not what they /should/ put, or what potential employers want.
Basically, it is pretty useless - you could use it to argue that people
think (rightly or wrongly) that C skills are useful for getting a job,
or that people with C skills are regularly out of a job and needing to
apply for a new one.
>
And you can also expect that the people behind the article don't know
the difference between C, C++ and C#.
on my part (I'm now hoping my lottery ticket is a winner).
So, is there any reasonably reliable such "Top 10" list?Reliable for what?
If so, where? If not, where would C fall on it if it didIf you are talking about a list of programming languages people probably should have on their CV's, it depends totally on the job. When people are applying to work as software developers at my company, if they don't have C on their list, it's unlikely we will bother with an interview. C++ would be good, assembly would be good. Listing "Excel" in programming languages would count negatively.
exist? (I'd probably guess C>10, so make that a "Top 100"
list, as needed.)
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