On 2005-07-05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Up until a few years ago, I ran the computer science department at a > high-school. I provided support for the English teachers who taught > *all* students -- but they taught things like the use of a word > processor or the internet,
That's not computer science. > and never covered the meaning of "lambda". I taught a computer > applications course which was taken by only small fraction of > the students (<10%) but there I taught things like the use of > photo-editing software, creating web sites, and the use of > simple databases; That's not computer science. > I never covered the meaning of "lambda". I also taught the > programming class (taken by only a dozen or so students per > graduating class) -- students learned basic concepts like > variables, looping, up through fancier bits like a couple > different sorting algorithms. Now you're getting a little closer to computer science. It sounds like you ran a computer user training department. I don't think it could be called computer science. > But I didn't cover the meaning of "lambda". And I also taught > the "AP" computer course (taken by an average of just 4 > students per year!), in which I explained things like object > oriented programming and recursion and managed to get the > students to the level where they could work together as a > group to write a moderately complex program, like a simple > video game. And I didn't teach the meaning of "lambda", nor > was it covered by the "AP" exam, which is supposed to be > equivalent to a single college-level course in computer > programming. Computer programming isn't the same thing as computer science. It's just one of the tools used to do computer science. > So I'd say that it's a pretty obscure name that most people > wouldn't know. I can't believe that anybody with any computer science background doesn't know it. > And besides, "def" isn't a "magic" word... it's an abreviation > for "define"... I hope that any student who didn't understand > a word as common as "define" wouldn't have graduated from our > school. Lamda isn't a magic word either. It comes from lambda calculus. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Is this where people at are HOT and NICE and they visi.com give you TOAST for FREE?? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list