Welcome to Software Development on Codidact!
Will you help us build our independent community of developers helping developers? We're small and trying to grow. We welcome questions about all aspects of software development, from design to code to QA and more. Got questions? Got answers? Got code you'd like someone to review? Please join us.
Post History
There are a lot of factors that can go in the choice of a language: Do the properties of the language itself meet your requirements (e.g., C allows for more low-level optimizations than Visual ...
Answer
#2: Post edited
There is a lot of factors that can go in the choice of a language:- Do the properties of the language itself met your requiremets(e.g. C allows for more low level optimizations than Visual Basic, Java is more type safe than python, go compiles faster than rust)- - Are the libraries supported that you need?
- - Is tooling available for the language?
- How familiar is everyone with the language- - Do we receive the right support for the language?
In your case you have a hobby project and, I assume, you are the only person working on. For a simple website like that Java, PHP, Ruby, NodeJS, Python are all valid options for what you want to do.Since you are already familiar with Java this is an obvious choice, and I would only check if you already know about libraries you want to use that don't exist in Java.- There is nothing wrong with sticking with what you know, in this case.
Of course you might want to learn another language to broaden your horizon, in that case I would first decide on the language you want to learn and then whether it would be an adequate alternative for your project.
- There are a lot of factors that can go in the choice of a language:
- - Do the properties of the language itself meet your requirements
- (e.g., C allows for more low-level optimizations than Visual Basic, Java is more type safe than python, go compiles faster than rust)
- - Are the libraries supported that you need?
- - Is tooling available for the language?
- - How familiar is everyone with the language?
- - Do we receive the right support for the language?
- In your case, you have a hobby project and, I assume, you are the only person working on. For a simple website like that Java, PHP, Ruby, NodeJS, and Python are all valid options for what you want to do.
- Since you are already familiar with Java, this is an obvious choice, and I would only check if you already know about libraries you want to use that don't exist in Java.
- There is nothing wrong with sticking with what you know, in this case.
- Of course you might want to learn another language to broaden your horizon. In that case I would first decide on the language you want to learn and then whether it would be an adequate alternative for your project.
- []()
#1: Initial revision
There is a lot of factors that can go in the choice of a language: - Do the properties of the language itself met your requiremets (e.g. C allows for more low level optimizations than Visual Basic, Java is more type safe than python, go compiles faster than rust) - Are the libraries supported that you need? - Is tooling available for the language? - How familiar is everyone with the language - Do we receive the right support for the language? In your case you have a hobby project and, I assume, you are the only person working on. For a simple website like that Java, PHP, Ruby, NodeJS, Python are all valid options for what you want to do. Since you are already familiar with Java this is an obvious choice, and I would only check if you already know about libraries you want to use that don't exist in Java. There is nothing wrong with sticking with what you know, in this case. Of course you might want to learn another language to broaden your horizon, in that case I would first decide on the language you want to learn and then whether it would be an adequate alternative for your project.