I'd agree that C is a solid foundation to learn on, and also that assembly can really add a few ripples to the old grey wad. Scheme and Lisp dialects are good because they make you realize that TI(truly)MTOWTDE(verything) I found though that the course in college that really, profoundly, changed my programming approach was a course in state machines and finite automata (with a nice segueway into regular expressions, of course) - these being the absolute foundations and primordial soup of computer science, I suppose this is natural, don't overlook this significance. Ensure that they recieve these lessons.
It's not what you look like, when you're doin' what you’re doin'.
It's what you’re doin' when you’re doin' what you look like you’re doin'! - Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
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WPI was mainly C, but there was a required assembly class and one or two C++, you also had a class that went into Scheme and Prolog, ick. A good rounding with a firm practical foundation.
- Ant
- Some of my
best work - (1 2 3)
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