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Looking 5 years ahead: Will traditional PLC programming languages become obsolete as AI-generated code and natural language interfaces emerge, or will ladder logic maintain its stubborn dominance on the factory floor?

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That's a really interesting question about where industrial automation is heading! Based on what I'm seeing in the industry, here's my take on what the next 5 years might look like:

Ladder logic isn't going anywhere soon - it's got that stubborn dominance for good reasons. Think about all the existing factories with decades-old systems that still work perfectly. Maintenance technicians know it, engineers understand it, and there's a massive installed base that would be incredibly expensive to replace.

However, AI and natural language interfaces are definitely making inroads. The global AI in PLC market is predicted to grow over 25% from 2023 to 2028! What's happening is more of an evolution than a revolution. AI is shifting PLC programming from rigid rule definition to flexible, adaptive orchestration.

Here's what I think will happen: AI tools will become powerful assistants that help generate ladder logic, structured text, or function block code, significantly speeding up development. Natural language interfaces will help new engineers get up to speed faster and make maintenance easier. But the actual control logic running on factory floors? That's still going to be traditional PLC languages for the foreseeable future.

The real challenge is integration - AI pilots often fail because they can't handle 20-year-old PLCs speaking Modbus or integrate into existing workflows. The winners will be solutions that create "wrappers" - edge gateways that translate modern AI into legacy protocols without breaking production lines.

So in 5 years, expect to see more AI-enhanced PLC programming tools, but ladder logic will still be running the show on the factory floor. It's a classic case of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" meeting "let's make it better without breaking it."

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