More than 20.5 million Americans lost their jobs in April, according to Labor Department data. If you recently lost your job, or just want to learn something new, consider learning what the job site Indeed says is 2020’s most in-demand skill: coding.
Analysts at the site combed through its database to find the best jobs of the year based on three factors: average pay, the job title’s growth on the site over the past three years, and the number of postings for the job for every 1 million total listings on the site.
The most promising job was software architect, the person who makes high-level decisions about the design and standard of code used in a platform. In second place was a full-stack developer, or someone who has the complete coding skills to make a platform.
While some hiring managers don’t require a job applicant know a specific coding language (the coding skills are often transferable across languages), it does help to know which languages are associated with the highest-paying jobs.
HackerRank, a tech company that focuses on competitive programming challenges for both programmers and recruiters, surveyed over 116,000 software developers and students to figure out what coding languages were associated with the highest pay worldwide.
Below is the complete list of languages, along with how they compare to the salary of the average developer, which according to HackerRank’s survey is $54,491.
C++ is associated with an average global salary of $55,363.10
The salary for this language is 1.6% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Try this interactive Udemy tutorial for beginners or this Udacity intermediate course for people with coding knowledge.
JavaScript is associated with an average global salary of $55,690
The salary for this language is 2.2% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Software engineering teacher Mosh Hamedani has a free YouTube course on Javascript, CodeAcademy has a free beginner class, and Learn JS has a free, interactive tutorial.
Python is associated with an average global salary of $56,670.90
The salary for this language is 4% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: YouTube channel CS Dojo has a video explainer for absolute beginners, software engineering teacher Mosh Hamedani has a helpful YouTube video as well, and Udemy also has this free introductory course.
TypeScript is associated with an average global salary of $57,433.70
The salary for this language is 5.4% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: It helps if you know JavaScript, as TypeScript builds off this language. However, FreeCodeCamp has a beginner course in TypeScript and KoderHQ has a free interactive tutorial.
Kotlin is associated with an average global salary of $58,196.60
The salary for this language is 6.8% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: FreeCodeCamp has a beginner YouTube explainer and KotlinLang.org offers an interactive tutorial for people with coding knowledge.
C# is associated with an average global salary of $58,469.10
The salary for this language is 7.3% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: CodeEasy.Net has a beginner tutorial on the basics of the language, and there are multiple videos on the language available on YouTube.
Prolog is associated with an average global salary of $60,648.70
The salary for this language is 11.3% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: There are a few websites that offer free instruction on how to learn Prolog.
R is associated with an average global salary of $61,629.60
The salary for this language is 13.1% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Edureka! has a helpful YouTube tutorial for beginners and Codecademy has a course for beginners.
Pascal is associated with an average global salary of $62,773.90
The salary for this language is 15.2% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Pascal Programming has a bunch of free online tutorials and Udemy has a course that costs $12.
Swift is associated with an average global salary of $65,171.50
The salary for this language is 19.6% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: FreeCodeCamp.org has a YouTube series on the language and Hacking with Swift has a helpful online course.
Objective-C is associated with an average global salary of $66,697.30
The salary for this language is 22.4% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Udacity has a free course on the language and Tutorials Point has a helpful intermediate-level guide.
Ruby is associated with an average global salary of $72,146
The salary for this language is 32.3% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Codecademy has a great course for beginners, and FreeCodeCamp.org has a helpful YouTube explainer.
Go is associated with an average global salary of $72,691.30
The salary for this language is 33.4% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: This helpful e-book is great for people with a coding background. Beginners can also look to this online course or Udemy’s $12 class.
Scala is associated with an average global salary of $77,159.60
The salary for this language is 41.6% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: CognitiveClass.ai offers a great beginner tutorial. You can also check out this interactive course.
Perl is associated with an average global salary of $84,025.50
The salary for this language is 54.2% higher than the global average salary.
Where to learn it: Many online Perl courses assume a basic understanding of coding. If you have no basic coding experience, check out this “Perl for Newbies” course, or consider taking a free, introductory course in another, more common language like Python or JavaScript before venturing into Perl. If you have a basic understanding of coding, check out TutorialsPoint.com or LearnPerl.org.
This content was originally published here.