On Aug 4, 2015 11:36 AM, "Sisyphuss" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Or just start to read some Julia material, does it make sense to you? If
not, just give up.

Brilliant!  If at first you don't succeed, just give up!  I wish my mom had
told me that decades ago.

Julia as a first language might work if you have the right kind of mind.
Probably would not have worked for me but YMMV.

On the other hand, why just one first language?  If I had to do it all over
again I think I would pick 3 languages and attack them simultaneously.
Remember all programming languages amount to the same thing in the end -
unlike natural languages.  So go ahead with Julia, but also study Scheme
(best book ever for autodidacts: The Little Schemer), and one more.  Avoid
Java, shun C++, don't get me started on PHP.  Python, maybe.  Javascript,
nyet.  Lua is very cool.  Go is too.  And - don't laugh - any form of Rexx,
probably NetRexx. Designed by a genius as a kind of programming language
with a human face.

By working with multiple languages you will avoid having your tender gray
matter deformed by the biases of any particular language, easing your
transition to computational enlightenment.

HTH,

>
>
>
> On Tuesday, August 4, 2015 at 5:34:40 PM UTC+2, phineas vang wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Just wondering if Julia is a good choice as a first programming language
to learn. I have limited experience in vba for MS Office apps and SQL but
these may not be considered true programming languages.
>>
>> Thanks

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