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Home/ Questions/Q 731423
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T07:01:29+00:00 2026-05-14T07:01:29+00:00

I’ve been using C/C++ and Python, but I now I see that a lot

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I’ve been using C/C++ and Python, but I now I see that a lot of new programming books use Java or C# as examples.

I don’t think I’ll use Java or C# for the time being, but I guess I have to study one of the languages (or both of them) in order to read/understand the books.

  • How similar Java and C#? If I learn Java, is learning C# almost free? Or vice versa?
  • If I have to choose only one of the two languages, which would be better? Which has wider coverage in terms of programming language?
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T07:01:29+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 7:01 am

    You are asking several questions at once. Let me address them separately:


    How similar Java and C#?

    Both C# and Java drew from C/C++ (and Objective C, and others) to define their syntax. And both of them are compiled to an intermediate language.

    This common origin makes the languages look similar in many levels, to the point that code in either language can be confused with the other by beginners; and also makes the runtime environment somewhat comparable. However, there are substantial differences in both design principles and how each language evolved that make working with each quite different; here are the most prominent ones:

    On the syntax level, Java was influenced by Smalltalk, while C# tried to stay closer to C/C++ (eg: compare Java’s extends and implements with C#’s : notation) and took a vague inspiration from VB on those concepts that weren’t mappable to C/C++ (example: property syntax).

    On the features level, C# 1 was definitely close to Java. Among the few differences they had, I’d highlight C#’s support for "unsafe" code (including pointers) and for delegates; and Java’s controversial throws. This makes sense, since one of the goals of C# was to become an alternative to Java.

    Many language features differ heavily on implementation details. For example, enums are very C’ish on C#, but are full objects in Java; or generics are implemented on the IL-level in C#, but in Java are dealt with via type erasure (neither is really close to C++’s templates besides syntax).

    On the API level, they are worlds apart. C# relies on the .Net Framework, which was built on Microsoft’s experience with the Visual Studio family of products (and thus is significantly Windows-oriented), while Java’s Class Library was built, IIRC, from scratch, and heavily evolved over time (on these Swing days, does anyone remember AWT? I do).

    Finally, it’s worth mentioning that each of the languages has its own idioms, and its own community of supporters behind it.


    If I learn Java, is learning C# almost
    free? Or vice versa?

    Neither. The key similarity is the basic syntax (semicolons, curly braces, array indexing, case-sensitiveness, etc), and you already have that from C/C++.


    If I have to choose only one of the two languages, which would be better?

    Short answer: flip a coin.
    Long answer: it depends on your coding style and on what aspects of the language you value most. My best advise is to start by trying to learn both, until you feel that one of the languages pulls you more strongly than the other.

    Alternatively, you can take a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Java_and_C_Sharp.


    Which has wider coverage in terms of programming language?

    If you mean language built-in features, I’d say C# wins for a narrow margin. Most of the features that C# has and Java lacks are syntax sugar (although they together make a significant difference on the learning curve and on the way the language is used). I value really high C#’s operator overload and extension methods. Also, LINQ is quite an interesting concept, but it is essentially a declarative syntax for loops.

    Hope this helps.

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