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Teaching programming h;lp

Name: Anonymous 2006-09-18 11:08

I'm going to teach programming to somebody who's going to study it more formally in a year, but wants to be learning part of it in the mean time.

What SIMPLE, CLEAN, STRUCTURED language would you recommend me to use for teaching? Please, refrain from language wars as this is not a fanboy thread but a serious question. Before yuo mention it, I'm not going to start with either Python or Ruby because they're too complex and get too much in the way, and no, I'm not stupid enough to start with Java because a radical OO language (and a crappy one at that) with a shitty enterprise API is not the best either.

I'm thinking Pascal. As much as it sucks, it has strict/anal types (it's better to start anal than to start easy-going and botch it), simple yet not messy syntax, simple stdin/stdout input and output to play with (that's all I'll need), and none of the complexity of OO. Yet it sounds so useless. But I don't know of other languages that meet these requirements.

Name: Anonymous 2006-09-18 18:31

>>14
They're simple, straightforward and transparent. Furthermore, it's trivial to teach how to write your own string handling functions. It also illustrates how there's very little in C that's "magical" and what you couldn't build for yourself. (varargs is one, primitive types is another, main() is one more, I can't think of any others.) This is very useful in a teaching context, because it lets the students think of strcmp() and the like as just something that someone has already written for them.

It's not like >>1 is going to be teaching complicated data structures beyond, say, the humble doubly-linked list or anything, right?

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