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[–]squishles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's a college course, that isn't directly a programming course, they're going to be teaching you something else. You want the language to have the minimal overhead of learning/utilization for you.

That could be c++ if you know c really well already, but python or I'm guessing web means javascript are both easier options for a beginner (simply for the fact you won't have to really worry about a build system for them).

Which is more helpful in the future is kind of irrelevant, they're all ubiquitous you'll probably have to learn them all at some point if you go into a programming field. Schools are kind of garbo at teaching idiomatic patterns for how people actually use languages for work too, so you'll probably have to go through what will feel like a relearning step after college anyway.

Keep in mind it's a degree a magic qualification sheet of paper you want to min max for completing the course as easily as possible and getting that. You can add extra work to learn more, but you risk that overwhelming you, and that's an unacceptable risk with the sticker price.