Well, I didn't start programming with C. I learned C before C++. And not as a step for learning C++, either. I learned C about ten years ago from some random book from the library, and C++ about a year and a half ago.
user1804599
I started with Objective-C and then I learned C. :<
Because you will hit UB at every corner, and without someone around to tell you otherwise, you may draw the wrong conclusions.
user142019
@Pubby common sense. “Undefined” is a word with a meaning, and so is “behavior”. If you know C++ is defined somewhere (the Standard), it shouldn’t take more than a minute to learn what UB is.
C++ is the most flexible and won't stop you from doing what you want to do, C# is ... OK ... but it's easier to use. Java is just terrible in every way imaginable.
the problem with hardware-accelerated C# is that you really, really need deterministic destruction- real deterministic destruction, not their IDisposable shit- to deal with GPU resources.
I mean, you'd have to roll all of your own containers so they'd properly Dispose() of stuff, your own smart pointers, everything, and God help you if you need to use a third-party class that won't Dispose() of your stuff, and even after all of that is done, you still have to manually using every new stack variable
still, C++ is one of the few, if not the only, language that combines both low level performance with enough age for high level convenience and libraries, in particular those that lend them selves towards game development
seriously, just try using OpenGL in Java, it will make you bleed out your arse
EDIT
I have effectivley re-wrote this question in order to greatly imrpove its quality - see revision logs if you must
I have narrowed down my problem to the initialisation phase of my program, when I am trying to create my vertex buffer. The code that I am currently using is...
vaoID = new in...