+ 3

Future scope in java???????????

java????????

22nd Sep 2017, 6:21 PM
Maneesh Kumar Singh
Maneesh Kumar Singh - avatar
6 Respostas
+ 4
Global scope.
22nd Sep 2017, 6:30 PM
AgentSmith
+ 4
Ah okay, I understand now. Thankfully, my answer is still relevant to what you meant. Java isn't disappearing anytime soon, to the best I can tell. So if you're wondering if it's worth spending your time on Java, it certainly is. Think about this, C++ was created nearly 50 years ago and it's still relevant today, despite how much technology has drastically progressed. With that being said, technology changes all of the time, and only changes quicker with the more technology we obtain. Something new and better could come out that makes a lot of what we already know obsolete in the future. However, the golden rule in the IT world is to be flexible and adaptable with change. Change always ends up happening at some point, and the survivors are the ones who was able to move with the change. If you can't adapt to change, you fade out.
22nd Sep 2017, 7:16 PM
AgentSmith
+ 3
To be honest, I have no idea what you're even asking, so I gave you a programming joke to depict that Java is worldwide (not going anywhere).
22nd Sep 2017, 7:12 PM
AgentSmith
+ 2
means
22nd Sep 2017, 7:09 PM
Maneesh Kumar Singh
Maneesh Kumar Singh - avatar
+ 1
means my future
22nd Sep 2017, 7:13 PM
Maneesh Kumar Singh
Maneesh Kumar Singh - avatar
+ 1
Nice one, Netkos! The more flexible you are, the longer you can survive in this ever-changing world.
24th Sep 2017, 2:59 PM
Alfred Kuhlman
Alfred Kuhlman - avatar