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PDF Editor FAQ

As a CS student, why do I need to take calculus when no programmer will ever need to use it?

I was a CS student. I took calculus. I can’t imagine NOT knowing at least the basics of calculus.OK, your idea of “computer science” is learning how to make a 1990’s vintage web site then you don’t need more than middle school math.But today it seems AI is the big thing. How could you possibly understand how to train a network using gradient decent if you don’t know what a partial derivative is? Yes you could cut and paste some code you don’t understand and make it work but that is not why they train computer scientists.Then there is robots and machine control and industrial automation that all depends on basic physics which is based on calculus.Same for games. If stuff moves, be it real robots or virtual monsters in a game calculus is involved. (es many games coders will use a physics library that hides the calculus but you are a Computer Scientist, not a game coder, and could be called on the design the library.)And then some CS students like to learn a little bit about computers and electronics and all of Electrical Engineering is based on calculus.But I do admit that basic business application development rarely makes use of calculus.And then the MOST important reason of all. Universities are NOT job training schools. They attempt to create well rounded and educated graduates who can continue to learn and think on their own. To NOT understand calculus is to be ignorant of one of mankind’s most important and widely used inventions. After all, they make CS students study humanities like art and history too. Universities are NOT job training schools.EDIT: Just ad to add this. I’m a software engineer with CS degree and today I am working on software to drive an electric power steering unit for a small car. YES, calculus is used. We are driving a mass (front wheels and such) with an electric motor and we need to control the accelerations and not overshoot. It is all about control theory which uses a lot of math. That said. Math is not my best subject. I have to look this up and re-learn it as required. The next phase of the project will be “lane keeping” a sensor will look ahead combine with an IMU to send input to the power unit. Quite a lot more math is required. It is getting to be more and more like this as the level of automation raises.Many people think of computers as those machines that run games and spreadsheets. But today there might be eight computers inside your car. Even the mouse you are holding has a computer to calculate movement based on the downward-looking sensor One would hope you are not studying CS so you can build another dogfood website.

Which programming language made you say, after its invention, "wow, this really fixed a problem"?

Maybe C#.Prior to C#, typical Windows development was in Visual Basic or C++, maybe Delphi, or perhaps even something like Visual Foxpro, which turned up more often than you might expect.C#, along with WPF truly modernised Windows development.REBOL is interesting too, with more investment and development, it could be revolutionary. I used REBOL a while back to make a small business tool, basically because I couldn’t bear the idea of making Yet Another Website.Even though it was the first time I ever used REBOL, I got results waaay faster than I could have developed a small website. I think REBOL cut development time more than in half, and that was the first time I ever used it.REBOL could be the next HyperCard, it could allow extremely rapid development of business applications.

Why do countries not develop a programming language in their native language?

I think that looking at the following list, the answer to your question could be obvious.Aheui; 아희 – An esoteric programming language similar to Befunge but using Hangul (Korean)AMMORIA – Open source object oriented Arabic programming language, designed especially for Arabs.Аналитик – A Russian-based language for symbolic manipulations with algebraic expressions used in the Soviet series of MIR computers.Эль-76 – A Russian-based language for symbolic manipulations with algebraic expressions used in the Soviet series of МВК Эльбрус computers.ARLOGO – The first open-source Arabic programming language, based on the UCB Logo interpreter.AxumLight / Geez# – Amharic-based programming languages on the .NET platform[8]丙正正 – Chinese C++.BAIK – C with Indonesian keywordsBASICOIS - BASIC with French keywordsBato – A scripting language based on the Filipino language (Tagalog). The first Filipino programming language.Changjo – A language using Hangul (Korean). It is used for multimedia and game programming.ChaScript – A scripting language based on Bengali and is first of its kind. It is built using ECMAscript grammar.Chinese BASIC – Chinese-localized BASIC dialects based on Applesoft BASIC; for Taiwanese Apple II clones and the Multitech Microprofessor II.Chinese Python – a version of Python localized to Chinese.Dolittle, ドリトル – A Japanese programming language developed for educational purposes.DRAKON — A visual language in which any language may be used.Drama [nl] – An assembly language for didactical purposes based on Dutch.Dzintars – Ruby translated into Latvian; claims to be the first Latvian programming language.Easy Programming Language (易语言) – A Chinese rapid application development language.Ebda3 – A multi-paradigm high-level Arabic programming language.Enkelt – A programming language that uses a Swedish syntax.எழில், Ezhil programming language – A Tamil programming language developed for educational purposes.farsinet – A Persian (Farsi, فارسی, پارسی) object-oriented programming language for .NET framework. It is similar to C# and Delphi.Fjölnir – An Icelandic imperative programming language of the 1980s.FOCAL – Keywords were originally in English, but DEC produced versions of FOCAL in several European languages.4th Dimension – On local versions, its internal language uses French or German keywords.G-Portugol – A programming language with Portuguese keywords.GarGar – A Spanish procedural programming language based on Pascal for learning purposes.ΓΛΩΣΣΑ – A Greek programming language based on Pascal that is used for teaching purposes in secondary education.GOTO++ – A French esoteric programming language loosely based on French and English.ひまわり (プログラミング言語) [ja] ひまわり – Sunflower, a Japanese programming language. It is used for hobby and business applications.Hindawi Programming System – A set of variants of C, C++, lex, yacc, assembly, BASIC, Logo and Ada, in Bengali, Gujarati and Hindi.Hindi Programming Language – A Hindi programming language for the .NET Framework.hForth – A Forth system with an optional Korean keyword set.Jeem ج – An Arabic programming language, based on C++ with simple graphics implementation.kalimat – An Arabic programming language that aims to help Arab children learn about programming.Karel – An educational programming language with Czech and Slovak versions.Kotodama on Squeak, ことだま on Squeak – A Japanese programming language based on Squeak for educational purposes.Kumir [ru] – A Russian-based programming language similar to Pascal and IDE, mainly intended for educational usage in schools. The name is an acronym, which means Комплект ученический 'Мир' ('Mir' student's environment).Latino – A language with a completely Spanish-based syntax.Linotte – A French programming language.Logo – In one of its Apple II editions, it was available in French. LOGO for the Commodore 64 had an Italian localization.Loughaty (MyProLang) – A general-purpose natural Arabic programming language based on a proprietary syntax.Lusus – A Latin programming language. It is the first programming language to be exclusively in Latin.[25]LSE (Language Symbolique d'Enseignement) – a French, pedagogical, programming language designed in the 1970s at the École Supérieure d'Électricité. A kind of BASIC, but with procedures, functions, and local variables, like in Pascal.Mama – An educational programming language and development environment, designed to help young students start programming by building 3D animations and games. It is currently available in English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and Chinese.Mind – A Japanese programming language. It is used for hobby and business applications.MS Word and MS Excel – Their macro languages used to be localized in non-English languages.ML4 – A language for client/server database programming, with keywords in English or German.Nadesiko, なでしこ – A Japanese programming language.1C:Enterprise – A Russian framework and language for business applications. English keywords can also be used.Pauscal [es] – A language with a completely Spanish-based syntax; compiler for 32-bit Windows.Lingua::Romana::Perligata – Alternative Syntax for Perl 5 that allows programming in Latin.Phoenix – A C-like high-level imperative procedural Arabic programming language.potigol – A functional programming language in Portuguese for beginners.PSeInt – A pseudocode interpreter for Spanish, like Pauscal, with a completely Spanish-based syntax. PSeInt is an abbreviation for Pseudocode Interpreter.Qriollo – An impure strict functional programming language that compiles to C, Python and JVM Bytecode, with keywords in Rioplatense Spanish, spoken in Buenos Aires.Produire, プロデル – An object-oriented Japanese programming language. It is used for hobby and business applications.Rapira – A Russian-based interpreted procedural programming language with strong dynamic type system.Robik [ru] – A simple Russian-based programming language for teaching basics of programming to children.RoboMind – An educational programming language available in Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Polish, Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish.SAKO – A language created in the 1950s and nicknamed the "Polish Fortran".Scratch – An introductory visual programming language from MIT's Media Lab with support for programming in multiple languages included as standard.Sema – An Arabic CSS implementation.Sí – A direct translation pseudo-language for coding in C and C++ with Spanish keywords.Simorgh (SPL) سیمرغ – An object-oriented, general-purpose, interpreted and precompiled, portable and open-source programming language.Ssiat – A language using Hangul (Korean). The name Ssiat (씨앗) means "seed" in Korean.Swaram – A simple, general-purpose and procedural language designed for programming in Tamil.Superlogo – A Dutch creation for computer-aided instruction, based on Logo.TamliLogo – A Hebrew implementation of Logo.TI-Calculator BASIC – The 68000 version is localized. Unfortunately, various configuration strings are localized too, preventing direct binary compatibility.TTSneo[2] – A Japanese programming language. It is used for hobby applications.VisuAlg – A language designed to teach programming, in Portuguese, based in Pascal.W-Language – A French programming language used in the WinDev CASE Tool. A Chinese version is also available.YMB (Yazyk mashin buchgalterskih) – ЯМБ (язык машин бухгалтерских) (machine language for accounting) – A Russian programming language for Iskra-554, Iskra-555, and Neva computers.Yorlang – A Yorùbá programming language built on top of Node.js.ZhPy – A full-featured Python module which converts Chinese keywords, variables, and parameters.Regards.If this answer was helpful, Please UPVOTE and consider following me-Mario Galindo Queralt.

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