5/17/2023 0 Comments R programming macARM is the default under the M1 chip as Apple silicon is meant to process ARM style instructions - but via Rosetta you get x86 as well. It's painless to work on most anything meant to run under x86 so long as you're aware that what you're working on is intended for x86 instructions and not ARM. The package management system of Homebrew gives you Linux package management support similarity. I would argue that folks have a harder time on Windows than Mac for most of the above (the exception being Java - which in my personal opinion is a dumpster fire on any platform, but I digress). Support for Java, Python, Ruby, NodeJS, Go, Scala and similar languages is phenomenal. You did specifically ask about C++, which is not a language that I typically use. NET, and until Azure, didn't care much for most of Microsoft's tools or worrying about their platforms.
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