On-Topic Re: [Coco] Back to school
Jim Cox
jimcox at miba51.com
Sun Oct 2 01:06:02 EDT 2005
Boisy:
Thanks so much for the encouragement and insight. My long
term focus is to work with C in embedded systems,
scientific intrumentation (meteorology, oceanography,
astronomy) or robotics (I have some interestng ideas so
possibly all three)
As you know, I have some ideas for the CoCo, but until I
get a better grasp of C and refresh my electronics (it's
gotten very rusty working in IT and systems testing) I
really do not want to promise anything. I do have a lot of
ideas I may throw out there for other to chew on though.
Thanks again.
-Jim
On Sat, 1 Oct 2005 09:13:09 -0500
Boisy Pitre <boisy at boisypitre.com> wrote:
> That's great Jim. You will find that taking the fun
>part in taking these courses is not only learning
>something new, but relating it back in someway to your
>CoCo.
>
> One of the courses I am taking this semester is
>Programming Languages, where we investigate the ways and
>methods in which computer programming languages are
>constructed, designed and represented. Listening to the
>lecture and reading the book have given me an
>appreciation for how languages like Basic09 were created,
> the historical context in which they were born, and the
>design decisions that, at the time, were based on
>language conventions of the day.
>
> Along with the lecture, which is full of theory, there
>are assignments which are keeping us busy, and
>introducing us to knew languages at the same time. The
>semester project has us writing an interpreter for the
>Algol 60 language... in SNOBOL. We just received our
>in-semester assignment... writing a Hindley-Milner type
> inferencing algorithm in a language called ML (that's ML
>for Meta- Language).
>
>For me, all of this just sparks my imagination on what
>cool languages we could use to create programs for our
>CoCos. Of course, we have Basic09 which is a pretty
>darned good language in its on right. There is Pascal
>which is also a good language, and of course, C. But
> there are so many other languages that could be
>investigated, some interpretive, some compiled. Even
>the idea of creating a new programming language designed
>for the specific features and memory footprint of the
>CoCo is an interesting idea.
>
> Get everything that you can out of the class, and as an
>aside, think of creative ways in which you can apply
>this knowledge to the CoCo.
>
> Boisy
>
> On Oct 1, 2005, at 1:07 AM, Clifford Redding wrote:
>
>> Let me be the first to say "good luck"! I for one just
>>can't get my
>> head around "C" even though I have tried it in the past.
>>Maybe I'll
>> try again with it sometime soon! Yup. Sure, Maybe i'll
>>just stick
>> with Basic09.
>>
>>
>> Clifford
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jim Cox"
>><jimcox at miba51.com>
>> To: <coco at maltedmedia.com>
>> Sent: Friday, September 30, 2005 9:20 PM
>> Subject: [Coco] Back to school
>>
>>
>>
>>> I sent an email to some people privately, but I thought
>>>I'd share
>>> this with the list too. Last Wednesday was my first day
>>>of C
>>> Programming class. I'm coming into this with about a
>>>year of OJT
>>> experience of C programming and I am looking forward to
>>>build a
>>> nice foundation in the language. After a 23 year
>>>detour, I feel I
>>> am finally back on track.
>>>
>>> I want to say thanks to the many of you who have helped
>>>me in the
>>> past, not just with CoCo stuff, but with many other
>>>things. While
>>> I haven't done a lot with the CoCo lately, I do feel
>>>that my
>>> involvment with this list and with many of my CoCo
>>>friends has
>>> kept me going to the point to where I am now.
>>>
>>> Thanks all.
>>>
>>> -Jim
>>>
>>> --
>>> Coco mailing list
>>> Coco at maltedmedia.com
>>> http://five.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/coco
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Coco mailing list
>> Coco at maltedmedia.com
>> http://five.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/coco
>>
>
> --
> Coco mailing list
> Coco at maltedmedia.com
> http://five.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/coco
More information about the Coco
mailing list