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Where to start learning pascal for the sake of passing the test?
Because the information is quite fragmented on pascal on the Internet, I decided to ask people.
First, a background: I'm graduating from college and I want to further continue my profession as a programmer.
One of the UNT subjects for entering a university is the basics of programming and algorithmization, and on closer examination it turned out to be pascal.
In college, I took a basic java course, and I myself became interested in front-end. There is some experience in java and some Js. I will almost certainly not program in pascal. But since it determines 60% of the points, it must be studied.
What to read / watch, what to work on to effectively solve problems in the exam?
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Learn loops, data types, branches. For the exam, the main thing is to be able to think like a programmer
Pascal is not complicated, especially after Java.
So in your case, it will be enough to study the syntax (you can do it in a couple of weeks), and then study Algorithms
Learn Pascal.ABC.NET. In this programming environment, it is more modern (for 2008) and the environment itself is more convenient (also for 2008).
There is no point in climbing into a more serious "Pascal" - Delphi or fpc, if we are only talking about passing by points.
So pascalabc.net/books and that's it.
Pascal is an exemplary language with everything you need to understand programming in general. So his knowledge will only benefit you.
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