so far i used:
By far the most used language, and I feel quite confident in it too. I like it's syntax and being able to understand how the processor handles almost every line of code. I take loose inspiration from functional programming because I love the concept of bite-sized testable functions. I know it's considered bad practise but college got me used to hungarian notation and i lowkey like it.
I can get around it because of my knoweledge of C but I don't really use most features because I dislike OOP. Templates and std::vector are really nice and I can understand simple classes but when it gets to inheretance it becomes silly. It might be a hot take but the syntax is really pleasant to look at. I saw someone call polish the c++ of natural languages and thats very true.
My introduction to programming and a pretty good one since I could focus on the algorithmic problem solving side first without worrying about low level stuff. Wrote my high school final using it but since then I only use it sporadically for stuff like matplotlib. I miss pointers and because of the lack of them I always struggle with understanding if I'm passing something by reference or by value. Class constructors are done really nicely though.
Only used it for this website and I'm not ashamed of vibecoding it. Ugly and silly.
I bought an arduino when I went to college, my first introduction to embedded C, taught me a lot.
Used in my first serious programming class, basically works the same as the arduino for stuff we did (up to using timers and interrupts)
I bought a daisyseed and decided to learn to program the processor by myself instead of using the C++ library. A big jump from the arudiono but thats my main project for this summer.
You can get suprisingly fast in it rather easily, so it's not as useless as I first thought. Inspired me to write my own text based circiut simulator in C. Has some weird quirks but generally straightforward.
Wrote this website using it, usually fun to write unless you have to do js but web dev in general sucks.
Know a bit of it from using linux daily, definietly better than whatever windows has.
It's ok.
Recently discovered it, suprisingly elegant. I use it to compile C projects.
I had to learn it for the finals but #tbh just use microsoft access, you don't have to larp this.
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