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Re: Academic Formation

by Anonymous Monk
on Mar 08, 2004 at 21:39 UTC ( [id://334941]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to Teaching Perl inside an Academic Course

Which would be the advantages and benefits of Perl's usage on academic formation?

WAG ... none. Perl stands for Practical Extraction Reporting Langauge. I tend to think that Practical is the anthesis of Academic.

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Re: Academic Formation
by coder_ (Initiate) on Mar 14, 2004 at 14:20 UTC
    We use Ada as a first language at the University I attend. I think it is a great first language. Perl should be included in university studies, but like most I would agree that it is not a good first language. I would, however, like to see it included in any systems administration course or the like. There is a scripting languages course here that dedicates half the semester to Perl basics. I think further elaboration and exposure to Perl in a university setting would be a great thing, but not to introduce someone unfamiliar with a programming language to programming techniques, algorithms and basic concepts. In my opinion, the first academic language used should be strongly typed, with optional oop, very structured programming that would limit creativity to stray away from the historical concepts at hand. A language that would stay out of the way of the student and allow for the logic of their first several dozen programs to read like a book.

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