illogical and unsafe would actually be teaching this to kids.
Think about how well self taught hackers can break things now.
Now imagine if they'd been taught harware architecture and programming from the time they were little.
Well, the security profession might just get even bigger soon.
However, I don't care who publishes the tools that will help the kids learn. Logic is logic. If then, is if then. do while is do while. The syntax changes, not the idea.
If you learn the value of test scripts, does it matter what language it's in?
The benefits from learning logical thinking can be used throughout your life.
I wonder what they'll be teaching them on. There must be some lightweight youngster friendly languages out there that teach you all the logic basics, and then extend out further.
What I do to make it interesting for myself is to decide on one particular application, and then build that application in every language I know, and every language I learn.
It teaches me the differences between the languages, and some of their relative strengths and weaknesses. (plus it gives a portfolio of my work, since the programs I work on for my job are not showcaseable).
Lots of people would be bored to death by that approach, but I bet they each have their own.
If you learn well from books, get them second hand (god knows I won't pay full price for them), or see how decent your local inter-library loan is.
If you can learn well online, there are resources. Take Ruby for example, there are Hello World tutorials, language tutorials, and plain old up and running tutorials.
But I think that the best way to go is to get some comfort with how to get up and running with the language, and then just dive in and develop something, looking up as you go.
If you wanted to learn something like ASP.NET MVC you've got great resources over at asp.net that are free. And the website spark program from Microsoft to get you access to the software you may need.
reading over the comments here, it seems a number of people see no use in trying to innovate. Or can acknowledge that there may be better ways than the status-quo:D
Add to that, developers develop an affinity for their main IDE.
I'm primarily on.net all day, every day, which makes switching to Eclipse a pita every time I go and play with different languages.
(netbeans less so because I used it for Java development in school)
I've been interested in Python for ages, but between all the other languages I've had to learn, and still need to learn, I haven't made the time for it. Being able to use it in VS will make it more likely it'll be one of the next languages I learn.
i believe it's more, don't talk about how big your house is, how important your job is, or that you need to be at the gym in 26 minutes.
However, if that's just who you are, then yeah, you do need to weed out the people who don't like that pretty early.
Rift is a step sideways from WoW in a number of good ways, and similar in a number of boring/bad ways. Not gonna proselytize it however, but the actual rift (small r) mechanics are good and the way the treat classes is a nice change from you picked "x" therefore you are a healer/tank/dps and never shall you do anything else. My sub probably won't last past my next re-up though.
I know a lot of us are waiting on Guild Wars 2, and another subset of us is also waiting on The Secret World.
illogical and unsafe would actually be teaching this to kids.
Think about how well self taught hackers can break things now.
Now imagine if they'd been taught harware architecture and programming from the time they were little.
Well, the security profession might just get even bigger soon.
However, I don't care who publishes the tools that will help the kids learn. Logic is logic. If then, is if then. do while is do while. The syntax changes, not the idea.
If you learn the value of test scripts, does it matter what language it's in?
I never learned what a modulo was until I started programming /AP calculus werked 4 me
that's what I was thinking.
The benefits from learning logical thinking can be used throughout your life.
I wonder what they'll be teaching them on. There must be some lightweight youngster friendly languages out there that teach you all the logic basics, and then extend out further.
I got this link from my twitter feed, based on the assumption that Dart is Dash renamed.
http://markmail.org/message/uro3jtoitlmq6x7t
So there's hope.
As for why one wouldn't be estatic over javascript, there are many good reasons in that email, many others in The Good Parts book.
There's always room for something better, while not denegrating the existing.
What I do to make it interesting for myself is to decide on one particular application, and then build that application in every language I know, and every language I learn.
It teaches me the differences between the languages, and some of their relative strengths and weaknesses. (plus it gives a portfolio of my work, since the programs I work on for my job are not showcaseable).
Lots of people would be bored to death by that approach, but I bet they each have their own.
If you learn well from books, get them second hand (god knows I won't pay full price for them), or see how decent your local inter-library loan is.
If you can learn well online, there are resources. Take Ruby for example, there are Hello World tutorials, language tutorials, and plain old up and running tutorials.
But I think that the best way to go is to get some comfort with how to get up and running with the language, and then just dive in and develop something, looking up as you go.
If you wanted to learn something like ASP.NET MVC you've got great resources over at asp.net that are free. And the website spark program from Microsoft to get you access to the software you may need.
think there needs to be a campaign to rename these common errors more sensibly.
I'm not sure screwing up index vs count/length deserves some fancy name other than IndexOutOfRange error
reading over the comments here, it seems a number of people see no use in trying to innovate. Or can acknowledge that there may be better ways than the status-quo :D
Makes no sense from an engineering perspective but mercy be that people who are irrationally and emotionally invested in a pet language will STFU!
You seem irrationally and emotionally invested in javascript.
I feel like all the training I did to be able to code games** in a PC is going to be obsolete before I know it.
**or any other desktop coding
welcome to the world of developing.
This is how it's been, and how it will continue to be. Keep growing your skill set and you'll be fine (and a better programmer for it).
Add to that, developers develop an affinity for their main IDE.
.net all day, every day, which makes switching to Eclipse a pita every time I go and play with different languages.
I'm primarily on
(netbeans less so because I used it for Java development in school)
I've been interested in Python for ages, but between all the other languages I've had to learn, and still need to learn, I haven't made the time for it. Being able to use it in VS will make it more likely it'll be one of the next languages I learn.
i believe it's more, don't talk about how big your house is, how important your job is, or that you need to be at the gym in 26 minutes. However, if that's just who you are, then yeah, you do need to weed out the people who don't like that pretty early.
Wikipedia's image filter would just hide images per default, you're still able to see them with just one click, at any time.
YOU however, are the one to decide if the images are even hidden in the first place, on only your account.
That's a pretty important distinction.
In the US, sales taxes are mostly not shown in the advertised price. Whereas VAT is mostly always already included in the advertised price.
A $200 item in the states, purchased in a shop or online from a website with a B&M in the state you're shipping to, will cost $200 +x%
A £300 item in the UK will cost... £300
Rift is a step sideways from WoW in a number of good ways, and similar in a number of boring/bad ways. Not gonna proselytize it however, but the actual rift (small r) mechanics are good and the way the treat classes is a nice change from you picked "x" therefore you are a healer/tank/dps and never shall you do anything else. My sub probably won't last past my next re-up though. I know a lot of us are waiting on Guild Wars 2, and another subset of us is also waiting on The Secret World.