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by gbh444g
2001 days ago
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My 2c. From the programming perspective, QC isn't much different from GPUs or ASICs: a slightly different model, a slightly different language. For this reason, learning QC now, when there are no QC chips available, is like learning an obscure VHDL dialect to program a not yet released chip. If QC chips become available, I should be able to pick up QC programming in a matter of weeks, if necessary, |
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At some point in the future certain quantum algorithms will become 'callable' from traditional programming languages, and will be usable by any competent programmer without much hassle. But making the quantum algorithms themselves is quite a different ballgame altogether, very much unlike traditional programming.