robertjford80 said:
Which is more difficult to understand general relativity or Quantum Mechanics.
If you look at a standard undergraduate physics curriculum, you will conclude that QM is much easier than GR. Classical mechanics, special relativity, and E&M make a reasonable first year; classical waves and QM fill a second year, but GR is a graduate-level or fourth-year course.
However as others have already pointed out, that's at least as much a reflection of the computational difficulty as the intrinsic difficulty of the concepts. You can do an awful lot of QM with some vector calculus, linear algebra, complex analysis, and differential equations, stuff that every physicist-in-training will pick up by their second undergraduate year. Differential geometry and the brutally non-linear math of GR... Not so much.
From an intrinsic difficulty point of view, GR may be easier than QM. It's elegant, complete, and based on one big idea that, once grasped, makes everything clear. QM, however... Read some of the various interpretations, consider what's behind the slightly tongue-in-cheek advice to "shut up and calculate", and you might reasonably wonder whether it is even possible to understand QM in the way that GR is understandable.
Of course there is a significant aesthetic component in one's attitudes towards the two theories: De gustibus non est disputandum.