Comic: Why does the C language never go out of style?

More exciting technical comics, all in the programmers stand up

Postscript: This comic is mainly about the development history and scope of application of programming languages. C language/C++ has always been the best choice for system-level programming. No one can compete in the fields of operating systems, compilers, networks, databases, high-performance server-side software, etc. Maybe in the future, Rust can pose a threat to them. In the field of Web programming, a hundred flowers blossom, PHP, Python, Ruby each contend, Java is eye-catching in enterprise application development, and the ecology led by Spring has attracted countless programmers. Since the bottleneck of network programming is no longer the CPU, but I/O, Java has also broken the C/C++ barrier in some server-side software. In the field of big data, Java takes the lead, completing data collection, storage, calculation, and Python and other languages ​​based on this, giving full play to what they are good at: data analysis. The Go language has surprisingly penetrated into the field of cloud computing and back-end programming, and the future is limitless. In general, I think there are two points to pay attention to: 1. Each language has its own characteristics and scope of application, and there is no difference between superior and inferior. 2. The application layer programming changes drastically (especially JS), and the underlying programming changes are relatively small. 

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Origin blog.csdn.net/coderising/article/details/108989083