My personal experience, start with whatever you need the most. If you are doing embedded software, start with C or an assembly language like X86; if you are a Windows application developer, learn MS .Net (With C# or Visual Basic). If you are in to open source Unix projects, go for C++; if your job/clients uses Java for business solutions, learn Java. Assume you wanna be a web developer in the futher, go for Java or C#, JavaScript a must, DHTML a must, and CSS a must. But definitely start with something that will get your interest growing, otherwise it would be painful.
I started with C, then C++, then Java, then a lot of others, then jsp and php, then C# and MS .Net. Java and C# are my favorites.
Computer languages are not exactly like a human language, your learning won't get slow down if you did not start with the "right" language. But for languages with similarities, such as C++, Java, and C#, you could take the advantage of that and learn them together.
2006-08-29 11:24:29
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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XML-SVG for graphics, Flash is another good choice for you, but I have no idea what "priority" should I put it.
Languages having bindings to DirectX and OpenGL should be your last aim, that is C/C++ and all those.
2006-08-29 17:51:59
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answer #2
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answered by Andy T 7
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personally i learned java then c/c++. i don't recommend doing it this way, since i think C/C++ was more basic than java. i would learn those first
2006-08-29 17:47:17
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answer #3
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answered by promethius9594 6
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