Computer programming languages allow programmers to communicate with a computer in a language the computer understands. The most demanded programming languages include Java, C, C++, Python, PHP, Swift, SQL, Ruby, etc. Decoding programming language into binary is called compiling, and each language has its own distinct features. As these languages never die, experts and analysts believe that they do fade away. While it is impossible to define and predict which languages will endure over the next decade, our future will rely heavily on emerging technologies, and all such technologies run on diverse programming languages.

In 2020, pursuing a career in programming is becoming the most demanded profession. However, the demand and prominence of programming languages vary over time, with the introduction of new languages. So, let’s have a look at some programming languages that will not go anywhere anytime soon.

R

Experts in the IT industry expect that R is a dying language as Python is gaining momentum. In the TIOBE Index, Python is currently the third most popular language in the world, behind C and Java. The use of this language, from August 2018 to August 2019, surged by more than 3 percent to achieve a 10 percent rating. On the other hand, R managed 8th position in the TIOBE Index, from 20th position last July. In May, R dropped out of the top 20 programming languages for the first time in three years, with more developers in the field riding towards Python. Today, both languages are popular among data analysts and data scientists after emerging in the 1990s and meeting the demand for machine learning and handling large datasets.

COBOL

Earlier, learning COBOL (Common Business Oriented Language) was the only way to ensure a lifelong career in IT. Created in 1959 in part from a previous language design developed by Grace Hopper, an American computer scientist and United States Navy rear admiral, COBOL was an early example of an attempt at write-once, run-anywhere code at a time when it was more typical to write software using closely linked assembly language on a mainframe, the only kind of computer around. Today, COBOL is over 50 years old, and around 60 percent to 80 percent of all business transactions performed worldwide are processed by this language running on mainframes. The sudden outbreak of COVID-19 has significantly driven the demand of COBOL experts. This is because local municipalities had never shifted their databases from mainframes onto more modern systems, and they needed technologists skilled in COBOL to address unpredicted spikes in usage.

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Programming Languages That Won’t Go Anywhere Anytime Soon
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