3 hours later…
7:38 AM
@ParkingMaster Learning the first programming language is hard because you're not learning just the language but also programming. But picking up the second programming language is much easier, since you don't need to learn programming. You do have to shed your assumptions from the first language, though. Learning a third language and above is easier still.
OK, granted, I'm talking about being able to learn it enough to work with. Rather than learn it such that you're on par with <language> programmers. But still, the difference there is mostly practice.
Learning a new spoken language is much harder, since you don't get as much things to go with from previous languages. I'm told that if you have several spoken languages under your belt the rest are easy, but the first 3-ish at least aren't.Each language comes with a ton of vocabulary you need to learn to just have a basic conversation. Also grammar, idioms, constructs.
Moreover, foreign language is often more than the sum of its parts if you do want to practice it. You'd need to know some of the history and probably what speakers are like to truly understand, say, reading an article in a newspaper. They'd use references to what-is-common-for-others knowledge and concepts. Also probably refer to literature or other known figures, events.
By comparison, most programming languages just refer to the same basic logic constructs. But with some variety of terms and maybe some slightly variation of how they are interpreted. But ultimately the same thing. There are a few languages that differ in how they present computation (e.g., compare Java/C#/C++/JS which are mostly the same with Haskell or Prolog). But even then that's still not a lot of effort to learn.
4 hours later…
11:48 AM
@VLAZ I didn't consider this, thanks for the detailed explanation. Just realized that languages all use different grammar concepts and of course vocabulary, so learning a new language is always like learning from the start, since I would need to learn everything about the language, which I currently don't know. And programming languages all use the sams logical concepts, but aren't that hard if I already know even basic programming.
@VLAZ I originally learned JavaScript a few years ago, maybe close to 4 years ago, and it took about 6 months to completely learn most concepts and how to use it. I guess you could say I'm "fluent" in it today because I can recall information off the top of my head in order to write JavaScript, and learning a language is also like this. With enough practice and time, theoretically, I should be able to do this same thing with a spoken language I'm learning.
But it's a lot tougher than learning a programming language. 6 months is way less than 3-4 years. Also, I've heard that learning the language I'm currently learning could take up to 6 years to reach full fluency, and I don't think I can keep learning every day for 6 years straight. I have some free time nowadays since I'm just in school, but pretty soon I'm gonna have more school + a job, and I won't even have any time to learn a language.
6 hours later…
5:39 PM
The key to foreign languages is to immerse yourself in them. Without constant practice, you don't get much. In this day and age it's very very simple to get foreign language media, though. Or even talk to natives. Without leaving your home. You can just open up YouTube and find videos in the foreign language. You might even be able to get TV channels from the original country.
6:02 PM
IMO the key difference between programming languages are what tools exist, and what those tools look like
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