[kwlug-disc] Topics for future meetings
unsolicited
unsolicited at swiz.ca
Wed Nov 4 22:22:02 EST 2009
Raul Suarez wrote, On 11/04/2009 8:57 PM:
>
> If people are interested I could also give a presentation in
> programing for Linux for people that want to get into programming,
> or who are already programmers but haven't done it in Linux.
>
> It would be an overview and practical comparison. When is it better
> to use one over the other, pros and cons of each language/toolkit.
> etc.
>
> I would go over a manageable subset and would be time for people to
> add their input on languages that I'm not including.
I, for one, would certainly like to see something like this.
Particularly with an emphasis on (setting up) the development
environment (ide?), and things before (pseudocode?, segmenting /
development file / directory structure, particularly in a group
context), during (editing, pulling in libraries / packages / whatever
the heck else is needed), after (debugging / testing / deployment ).
I'm not suggesting a comparison of cvs' here, but there is an element
of using a repository (fetch, submit) in the flow. Somewhere. Somehow.
I'm also not suggesting depths of testing / debugging, as I expect
much of it will be programming language specific. But, again, it's
somewhere in the flow. Even, e.g. making a web (.html) page.
I'm an old time C programmer, and have used make quite a bit. (QNX2)
So cpp, cc1, cc2, lint, make, etc., ok, but I look at today's
development elements, objects, ide's, automake, versioning, and so on
and so forth, and quickly feel like I'm drinking from a firehose.
Java? Ruby? Python? Pearl? and on and on and on ...
A presentation that gave a high-level overview as to the nature of the
beastie would sure be appreciated.
Heck, even in a bash context it would be useful.
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