![]() ![]() After learning Go, it should be relatively easy to move to C/C++/Java/Python and learn the concepts behind those languages from there. All the concepts that you would want to learn when you're first starting programming are there, and easily accessible, except perhaps for OOP. Go has a C-like syntax and constructs, but it (with it's garbage collection model) is much more forgiving for newcomers. C is a great language to learn, but as a student's first language there are so many pitfalls to hop into and so little automatic feedback on what they're doing wrong that it quickly becomes a mountain to scale. Many other universities stick with C throughout. The older ports of SheepShaver for other host OSes (like x86 Linux) can also run OS 7.5.2+ using a ROM file extracted from a PPC Mac as listed on the site noted above. Don't worry about what that means." I don't think that's a great first impression for somebody that has never written a line of code before.) The Windows port of SheepShaver currently only supports OS 8.5.x, 8.6 and 9.0.x using the ROM extracted from the MacOSROMUpdate1.0.smi.bin file. (My professor said something like, "Now we're writing public static void main(String args). Many universities today teach Java as the primary language throughout the curriculum, but Java's syntax is unwieldy and magical for many beginners. ![]() I am not a fan of Go in general, but I think that Go is a good fit for academia. ![]()
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