Hi,
Easy to employ and have a big salary. Is it java or .net?
Assume with same experience years.
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Hi,
Easy to employ and have a big salary. Is it java or .net?
Assume with same experience years.
.Net developers probably work for less, but there are likely more Java developers around
From Software Development Magazine's 2004 (latest I could find from them) Annual Salary Survey:
$83k for Java
$81k for C#
Look for the subsection (average salaries by language used)
http://www.ddj.com/dept/global/184415215
Does Visual Studio support java or is it just Java.net?Quote:
Originally Posted by nemaroller
Also I think java is mostly used in Servlets now right?
I bet timeshifters laptop that this thread will be moved to general developers forum:thumb:
.Net does support Java-type languages but the interface and syntax may differ slightly, that's all
You win.Quote:
Originally Posted by Atheist
nice inpute guys.
I came up this question cause the company that Im working were planning to retool me to java. I have more than 2 years in c# programming. If this time comes I will be leaving C# and moving 2 java. I got this question also because I am not looking only my carrier path in my company. I aslo consider my future outside of my current company.
You don't have to just know ONE language - keep up to date with your C# skills. The day is sure to come where you have a project that makes C# a valid choice over Java, and otherwise.
Moving to Java will be a piece of cake - getting the hang of the Eclipse IDE and project structures will probably be the worst part.Quote:
Originally Posted by popskie
I would rather get paid lower for working in a language I like working in. Money becomes irrelevant if you're a code zombie.