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I have been thinking of learning some programming recently, but I don't feel confident enough. Is there any point in beginning with something like Zig or Go, and switching to something more serious later?

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[-] wewbull@feddit.uk 7 points 19 hours ago

Firstly, Zig and Go are serious. Anybody who told you different isn't a good person to learn from.

My journey was:

  • Basic (various dialects)
  • 6502 assembly
  • Forth
  • 68000 assembly
  • Pascal
  • C
  • Perl
  • C++
  • Python
  • x86 assembly
  • Java
  • Haskell
  • RISC-V assembly
  • Zig

With some others thrown in I'm sure and some hardware description languages. The stuff I learnt in Basic 45 years ago is still relevant today. I learnt something from all of them. It doesn't really matter where you start, but you have to take a first step and you need to write code to learn, even if it's just copying it. It has to go through your fingers.

[-] pixeldaemon@sh.itjust.works 1 points 13 hours ago

I remember people telling Zig was a "vibecoder" language, in the context of rewriting Bun to Rust. Yeah I know, a very odd kind of logic

this post was submitted on 05 Jun 2026
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Programming

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