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Frip2015-06-07 13:56:32
IT education
Frip, 2015-06-07 13:56:32

Why do many schools study C++?

Maybe I am not very knowledgeable on this issue, but for some reason it seems that in many institutions the average prof. education and universities, they teach precisely the pros.
Or is it different?

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6 answer(s)
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Mark, 2015-06-07
@printf

C++ is a very popular language, it is widely used in the industry, it can be used to illustrate all the necessary concepts that are / can be included in the curriculum (for example, memory management). All this makes C++ a good enough choice.

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FAN2 tom, 2015-06-07
@FAN2tom

Many institutions teach Pascal!

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sim3x, 2015-06-07
@sim3x

Lack of teachers with knowledge of other languages
​​And so asm + C + python + Java will cover a much larger volume of tasks in real life

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Oleg Gamega, 2015-06-07
@gadfi

tradition, however ... and it would be fine if they gave c++, often they put the gloomy creations of borlond in a red corner and pray to him ... and then people with honors go to construction sites ─ a real example ...

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Melz, 2015-06-07
@melz

It seems to me that most people start with C. It was like this for me:
C - the basics of programming, perhaps the most universal language from the point of view of the university. covers the electronics program (mcu) and future programmers.
the next course
"object-oriented design in C ++", as it were, a logical continuation.
If anyone needed Java, then they went there. Although to start studying the same android, as a rule, there was "knowledge of OOP". Anyone.

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RomanAkaMagician, 2015-06-07
@RomanAkaMagician

If you have learned C++ and learned how to write in it, then you can easily write in any language, but some people can’t get back from any language to C++.

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