Hailo! I want to learn C++ but I wonder:

Hailo! I want to learn C++ but I wonder:
Should I learn C++98 or C++17?
Thank you stackoverflowers :3

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teamtreehouse.com/
udemy.com/courses/search/?src=ukw&q=c+
news.efinancialcareers.com/uk-en/3001136/python-for-banking-jobs
news.efinancialcareers.com/au-en/3001925/morgan-stanley-a-programming-language
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Oh my fucking god we get the same threads every day, 50 times a day. Lurk more. Go browse. Don't write shitty questions, just watch other people.

C++14 or more, always

python

C++11 through C++17 are basically the same thing, you can learn the differences in a day

Please, don't hurt me. I'm a 29 years old virgin that wants some attention...

I've never read anyone asking this question before

No fuck off idiot.
Right now there are 3(three) threads on the same topic. Look at the archives. Idiot.

die, bitch

And That's A Good Thing!

wait for C++20

Fuck off attention whore, nobody cares.
Rust memes are posted everyday like 10 times, but they are still funny.
This is Jow Forums not Reddit, get a fucking life.

ANSI C

Anything >= C++11 is good. Don't bother learning anything before C++11.

Book recommendations

C++ Primer, 5th ed (C++11)

A tour of C++, 2nd? ed (C++17)

Also, no starch press is going to launch "C++ crash course" this month. I would look into that one too.

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HAHAHA SO FUNNY SIR!
REMINDS ME OF RAJAR, HE LOOKS LIKE MONKI BUT HE PROGRAMS RUST

That one is already available on their site. I bought a digital copy a few weeks ago. Pretty interesting. Although I am not sure if I'd recommend it to someone new to programming.

Where can I find information?
I like to collect information, learn new things, read interesting things but it's very difficult find something really good on Jow Forums.
Where can I find something useful to me on the internets?!

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C++11 and beyond. Knowing a little c++98 won't hurt though

teamtreehouse.com/
udemy.com/courses/search/?src=ukw&q=c+

Python retard here, started reading Primer a week ago (suggested here ) and it's I can only recommend it. it's not too babby tier and explains some very important minor things

Python is now a prerequisite for all these banking jobs
news.efinancialcareers.com/uk-en/3001136/python-for-banking-jobs

Morgan Stanley also has its very own proprietary programming language
news.efinancialcareers.com/au-en/3001925/morgan-stanley-a-programming-language

>Anything >= C++11 is good. Don't bother learning anything before C++11.
If you're working on personal projects, this, but if you're wanting to work in the enterprise space you better fucking learn C++98 since there is going to be a metric fuckton of old code out there in maintenance.

Python is popular in banking and research because it lets nonprogramers (scientists, accountants, statisticians, etc) make data crunching applications with relative ease. But what does that mean? You're expected to troubleshoot the shit they write in a lot of jobs like this.
Keep that in mind when seeing programming jobs listing python in institutions where traditionally nonprogrammers may be writing code.

please credit mr nagoor babu sir if you are taking his jokes

Retarts
FUCK
OFF
MY
BOARD

C++17, it's much better to use. The differences are not that huge though

this

c++11. The new features past that seem relatively minor, and it takes a while for everybody to get compilers that fully support newer standards - I mostly use visual studio 2015, for example, and it doesn't even fully support the c++14 feature set let alone c++17.

you actually misspelled retard, retard

98 > 17 so the latest one obviously

Fucking luddite retard.
It's 2019. If you're not programming in C++2a then just fuck off.

oh gosh, another successful troll thread

Maybe for personal projects, enterprise projects you're fucking lucky if they're on 11, and tons of shit in maintenance is still coded in 98.

>Don't bother learning anything before C++11.
>enterprise projects you're fucking lucky if they're on 11, and tons of shit in maintenance is still coded in 98.
How torturous would it be to learn C++11 then C++98? Is it better to do it the other way around? Could I get away with just knowing C++11?

C++11 contains everything C++98 does so you'll learn both languages by learning C++11
what you won't learn are (broken) C++98 patterns

>learning OOP language
>ever

learn rust instead