Hi! I am a longtime developer with a passion to empower other developers to be their best. I focus on cloud development and everything related to data access from .NET and .NET Core.
Let's see ... including those I could do more than just write "Hello, World" in ...
Assembly Language (6502) learned this on the Commodore 64.
Active Server Pages web dev in the early days
Bash coz Linux
BASIC first language (TI-99/4A)
Boo from my intro to MVC
C when I got tired of assembly
C++ my introduction to objects
C# one of two languages I've used since it was created
COBOL early business developer days
Fortran forced to use this in college (maybe why I dropped out?)
Go learned recently, mostly for its WebAssembly support
IBM RPG/RPG ILE from my AS/400 programming days (now iSeries)
J# tried this out to transition to C#
J++ sadly fell for this in the early days of Microsoft
Java language used in the startup days of a company I worked at in late 00s
JavaScript second language I've used continuously since it was invented
JScript coz I liked it better than VBScript
LINQ for biz data queries and aggregations
Lisp because sets are fun
Objective-C back in the early mobile device management days
Pascal language I learned in high school
Perl get stuff done on Unix machines
PHP webmaster days
PowerShell admin all the things
QuakeC one of my favorite languages - I was quite active in the Quake scene
QBasic to get it done faster
Rust one I've learned most recently and am quite enjoying
SQL/T-SQL coz apps need data, too ... wrote my first SQL in 1994 (25 years ago!)
TypeScript making JavaScript scalable since the beta
VisualBasic COM objects for the world!
XPath/XSLT because XML was going to rule the world
Wow, thanks for that excuse to trip down memory lane! I am familiar with/have written code in probably a half dozen more, but that's more hobby. The languages I listed I either have been paid to write or could have if I was working age when I learned them.
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Let's see ... including those I could do more than just write "Hello, World" in ...
Wow, thanks for that excuse to trip down memory lane! I am familiar with/have written code in probably a half dozen more, but that's more hobby. The languages I listed I either have been paid to write or could have if I was working age when I learned them.