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April 20th, 2014, 05:27 PM
#1
CodeInstitution | Need Advice
Hey,
Over the past few weeks I've been working on a site: http://codeinstitution.net I was wondering if you could give opinions on it.
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April 23rd, 2014, 08:49 PM
#2
Re: CodeInstitution | Need Advice
Still looking for advice. Please pm me.
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April 25th, 2014, 12:47 PM
#3
Re: CodeInstitution | Need Advice
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August 23rd, 2014, 03:15 PM
#4
Re: CodeInstitution | Need Advice
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August 23rd, 2014, 03:55 PM
#5
Re: CodeInstitution | Need Advice
IMO don't try and teach c and c++ together. The Your first program lesson is very confusing as you try to teach both the c and c++ way of displaying 'Hello World'. If you want to provide lessons for c and c++ then have different tracks and teach good practice for each of these languages separately. c and c++ are different languages and each has its own standard. The 'c' part of c++ is very like the c language but there are differences and the one approaches writing a program is different if you are using c++ to c.
All advice is offered in good faith only. All my code is tested (unless stated explicitly otherwise) with the latest version of Microsoft Visual Studio (using the supported features of the latest standard) and is offered as examples only - not as production quality. I cannot offer advice regarding any other c/c++ compiler/IDE or incompatibilities with VS. You are ultimately responsible for the effects of your programs and the integrity of the machines they run on. Anything I post, code snippets, advice, etc is licensed as Public Domain https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ and can be used without reference or acknowledgement. Also note that I only provide advice and guidance via the forums - and not via private messages!
C++23 Compiler: Microsoft VS2022 (17.6.5)
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August 24th, 2014, 02:26 PM
#6
Re: CodeInstitution | Need Advice
Originally Posted by 2kaud
IMO don't try and teach c and c++ together. The Your first program lesson is very confusing as you try to teach both the c and c++ way of displaying 'Hello World'. If you want to provide lessons for c and c++ then have different tracks and teach good practice for each of these languages separately. c and c++ are different languages and each has its own standard. The 'c' part of c++ is very like the c language but there are differences and the one approaches writing a program is different if you are using c++ to c.
Thanks for the advice. The problem is that a lot of those lessons were written by other users and I don't want to remove the lessons, because I don't have any to begin with. If you could help by contributing to the site, that'd be great.
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