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Thu, 15 May 1997 10:50:10 -0400 |
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Univesity of Scranton |
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W. Wesley Groleau (Wes) wrote:
>
> Philip Johnson wrote:
> >
> > W. Wesley Groleau (Wes) wrote:
> >
> > I suggest (and intend to tell the VIPs directly) that any
> > student in
> > a service academy should be at least as familiar with Ada as
> > with
> > any other language. If necessary, use a little of the
> > proposed
> > $1.5 million "investment in infrastructure" to ensure this.
> >
> > Wes,
Several years ago I attended a meeting at GWU where the various
accrediting
agencies (ABET, AACSB, CSAB, ...) made presentations to educational
liaisons
from foreign embassies. One of the people there was a computer science
faculty member from one of the service academies. While talking with
this
individual I asked them why they were not teaching with Ada. The reply
was
that Ada was too hard for their students. It was better to teach them
programming with a system with a good debugger because they did not have
time for concept development, because their students were too busy with
other courses! That’s why they teach them C/C++, there more interested
in teaching students how to use a debugger than in teaching good
software development concepts (at least for that one service). And we
wonder why military software development is in a shambles - let’s all
learn to program with debuggers and not analyze and plan.
I find this personally interesting because in my 25+ years of software
development, I happen to need a debugger twice. Once to prove to IBM
that there were incompatibilities between various Fortran compilers on
the same machine (No surprise there). An once to find a problem when I
tried to take a shortcut constructing a system in Ada (I found out why
you should never use the use clause, or at least be judicious in its
use).
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