No. There is no single thing that is “the future of programming”, because different problems require different solutions, and thus different tools will be appropriate for the job. There are still areas today where you are best of using assembly for example.
I think charitably interpreted, it means “the future of most real world application/non-specialist programming”. Pretty much like how object oriented is “most of real world application/non-specialist programming” today.
No. There is no single thing that is “the future of programming”, because different problems require different solutions, and thus different tools will be appropriate for the job. There are still areas today where you are best of using assembly for example.
I think charitably interpreted, it means “the future of most real world application/non-specialist programming”. Pretty much like how object oriented is “most of real world application/non-specialist programming” today.