> If you've had years of experience in old school c/cpp, then (I would assume) go will be a lot easier, and a lot better in comparison.
In my opinion old school C++ was a lot easier to learn than modern C++. I'm talking about the language specification specifically. The tooling is undoubtedly better.
Visual Basic 6 easily wins the "easiest language" award in my opinion though. But it's often seen as a faux pas to mention VB amongst developers
In my opinion old school C++ was a lot easier to learn than modern C++. I'm talking about the language specification specifically. The tooling is undoubtedly better.
Visual Basic 6 easily wins the "easiest language" award in my opinion though. But it's often seen as a faux pas to mention VB amongst developers