Hot Technology

Objective C Save Table: XLSX CSV

Objective-C is a general-purpose, object-oriented programming language that adds Smalltalk-style messaging to the C programming language. It was the main programming language supported by Apple for macOS, iOS, and their respective application programming interfaces (APIs), Cocoa and Cocoa Touch, until the introduction of Swift in 2014. Read more at Wikipedia external site

Occupations linked to this hot technology skill are listed below based on the percentage of their job postings that include the skill.

18 occupations shown
PercentageJob ZoneCodeOccupation
Under 1%415-1252.00Software Developers Bright Outlook Bright Outlook  
Under 1%315-1254.00Web Developers Bright Outlook
Under 1%415-1253.00Software Quality Assurance Analysts and Testers Bright Outlook
Under 1%415-1251.00Computer Programmers
Under 1%315-1299.08Computer Systems Engineers/Architects Bright Outlook
Under 1%415-1212.00Information Security Analysts Bright Outlook
Under 1%415-1299.09Information Technology Project Managers Bright Outlook
Under 1%315-1211.00Computer Systems Analysts Bright Outlook
Under 1%511-9041.00Architectural and Engineering Managers Bright Outlook
Under 1%315-1232.00Computer User Support Specialists
Not available425-2023.00Career/Technical Education Teachers, Middle School
Not available411-3021.00Computer and Information Systems Managers Bright Outlook
Not available415-1243.01Data Warehousing Specialists Bright Outlook
Not available415-1299.04Penetration Testers Bright Outlook
Not available419-2099.01Remote Sensing Scientists and Technologists
Not available427-3042.00Technical Writers
Not available415-1255.01Video Game Designers Bright Outlook
Not available415-1255.00Web and Digital Interface Designers Bright Outlook

Source: Lightcast external site job postings data for the US nationwide between January 1, 2023 and December 31, 2023. “Percentage” represents the ratio of unique postings which mention the skill to all unique postings linked to the O*NET-SOC occupation.

This page uses material from the Wikipedia article Objective-C (programming language) external site, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0 external site.