Best Programming Language Ever? (Free Course)

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • Is this the best programming language ever created? How did it change the world in 1978 and affect developments such as the Apple M1?
    // Menu //
    00:00 - Intro
    00:46 - Dr Chuck's Courses
    02:18 - C Program
    04:40 - C Programming vs Rust Programming
    06:58 - C Programming Language Book
    08:52 - CC4E.com / Fair Use
    13:01 - Amazon
    18:58 - Learning Different Languages
    24:58 - Garbage Collection
    27:40 - C Programming Language Backstory
    36:12 - Power PC to Intel
    42:13 - Why You Need Master Programmer
    42:57 - Did C Change the World?
    // Previous video //
    Computer Science isn't programming: • Computer Science isn't...
    // C for Everybody Course //
    Free C Programming Course www.cc4e.com/
    Free course on RUclips (freeCodeCamp): • Dr. Chuck reads C Prog...
    // C book Audio by Dr Chuck //
    www.cc4e.com/podcast
    // Python for Everybody //
    Python for Everybody: www.py4e.com/
    Python for Everybody on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializati...
    RUclips: • Python for Everybody -...
    Free Python Book: do1.dr-chuck.com/pythonlearn/E...
    Dr Chuck's Website: www.dr-chuck.com/
    Free Python Book options: www.py4e.com/book
    // Django for Everybody //
    Django for Everybody: www.dj4e.com/
    Django for Everybody for on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializati...
    RUclips: • Django For Everybody -...
    // PostgreSQL for Everybody //
    PostgreSQL for Everybody: www.pg4e.com/
    PostgreSQL for Everybody on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializati...
    RUclips: • Welcome to PostgreSQL ...
    // Web Applications for Everybody //
    RUclips: • Web Applications for E...
    Web Applications for Everybody: www.wa4e.com/
    Web Applications for Everybody on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializati...
    RUclips: • Welcome to Web Applica...
    // Books //
    The C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie (the 1984 Second Ed and 1978 First Ed): amzn.to/3G0HSkU
    // MY STUFF //
    www.amazon.com/shop/davidbombal
    // SOCIAL //
    Discord: / discord
    Twitter: / davidbombal
    Instagram: / davidbombal
    LinkedIn: / davidbombal
    Facebook: / davidbombal.co
    TikTok: / davidbombal
    RUclips: / davidbombal
    // Dr Chuck Social //
    Website: www.dr-chuck.com/
    Twitter: / drchuck
    RUclips: / csev
    Coursera: www.coursera.org/instructor/d...
    c
    rust
    c vs rust
    c course
    free c course
    dr chuck
    dr chuck master programmer
    #c #rust #drchuck

Комментарии • 462

  • @davidbombal
    @davidbombal  Год назад +56

    Is this the best programming language ever created? How did it change the world in 1978 and affect developments such as the Apple M1?
    // Menu //
    00:00 - Intro
    00:46 - Dr Chuck's Courses
    02:18 - C Program
    04:40 - C Programming vs Rust Programming
    06:58 - C Programming Language Book
    08:52 - CC4E.com / Fair Use
    13:01 - Amazon
    18:58 - Learning Different Languages
    24:58 - Garbage Collection
    27:40 - C Programming Language Backstory
    36:12 - Power PC to Intel
    42:13 - Why You Need Master Programmer
    42:57 - Did C Change the World?
    // Previous video //
    Computer Science isn't programming: ruclips.net/video/z3o6yEzcnLc/видео.html
    // C for Everybody Course //
    Free C Programming Course www.cc4e.com/
    Free course on RUclips (freeCodeCamp): ruclips.net/video/j-_s8f5K30I/видео.html
    // C book Audio by Dr Chuck //
    www.cc4e.com/podcast
    // Python for Everybody //
    Python for Everybody: www.py4e.com/
    Python for Everybody on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/python
    RUclips: ruclips.net/video/8DvywoWv6fI/видео.html
    Free Python Book: do1.dr-chuck.com/pythonlearn/EN_us/pythonlearn.pdf
    Dr Chuck's Website: www.dr-chuck.com/
    Free Python Book options: www.py4e.com/book
    // Django for Everybody //
    Django for Everybody: www.dj4e.com/
    Django for Everybody for on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/django
    RUclips: ruclips.net/video/o0XbHvKxw7Y/видео.html
    // PostgreSQL for Everybody //
    PostgreSQL for Everybody: www.pg4e.com/
    PostgreSQL for Everybody on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/postgresql-for-everybody
    RUclips: ruclips.net/video/flRUuodVPq0/видео.html
    // Web Applications for Everybody //
    RUclips: ruclips.net/video/xr6uZDRTna0/видео.html
    Web Applications for Everybody: www.wa4e.com/
    Web Applications for Everybody on Coursera: www.coursera.org/specializations/web-applications
    RUclips: ruclips.net/video/tuXySrvw8TE/видео.html
    // Books //
    The C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie (the 1984 Second Ed and 1978 First Ed): amzn.to/3G0HSkU
    // MY STUFF //
    www.amazon.com/shop/davidbombal
    // SOCIAL //
    Discord: discord.com/invite/usKSyzb
    Twitter: twitter.com/davidbombal
    Instagram: instagram.com/davidbombal
    LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal
    Facebook: facebook.com/davidbombal.co
    TikTok: tiktok.com/@davidbombal
    RUclips: ruclips.net/user/davidbombal
    // Dr Chuck Social //
    Website: www.dr-chuck.com/
    Twitter: twitter.com/drchuck/
    RUclips: ruclips.net/user/csev
    Coursera: www.coursera.org/instructor/drchuck

    • @Youtube_Stole_My_Handle_Too
      @Youtube_Stole_My_Handle_Too Год назад +1

      When speed is important the best programming language will always be the one that attracts the best compiler programmers. How that programming language is constructed isn't really that important as long as it gives a certain degree of freedom. Even if the language is crap this is a solvable problem by putting a scripting language and a parser on top. The C language doesn't come with any extraordinary features. In fact, it is pretty primitive and would be how most programmers would have done things on their first attempt if they only were intelligent enough not to pollute with redundant punctuation.

    • @michaelmueller9635
      @michaelmueller9635 Год назад +1

      One correction: Rust is a crossover of C and Haskell.

    • @dbtest117
      @dbtest117 Год назад

      Thanks, very interesting.
      Still watching, but I just have this tingling question. Why can’t we have smalltalk to mature to something that would be adopted?

    • @RockawayCCW
      @RockawayCCW Год назад +1

      Is that why Douglas Adams chose that number?

    • @pauldwalker
      @pauldwalker Год назад

      it is, and for exactly the reasons discussed.

  • @ScottBoyle1978
    @ScottBoyle1978 Год назад +47

    When I learned C it just made everything that I'd learned about programming and programming languages so much clearer ad gave me a better understanding of why we do things a certain way. Keep up the good work David, I love your content.

    • @knofi7052
      @knofi7052 Год назад +2

      That moment was assembler for me.😉

  • @mromhpos
    @mromhpos Год назад +75

    The way the professor talks is so understandable that he should start live streaming all his lectures...this kind of people we need to learn..

    • @Jorsten
      @Jorsten Год назад +1

      Still, 13h to teach python basics is just nuts. It should be done in 4h max.

    • @abbylynn8872
      @abbylynn8872 Год назад +6

      @@Jorsten 4 hrs would be for those that understand what's going on and understand more about the internet. For those that are trying to figure it our 13 hrs is what's needed. I remember my first programming class and realized everyone knew something I didn't. I didn't have that light bulb moment until the class was almost over. I could perform a task when asked but it wasn't intuitive. Now troubleshooting and problem solving was second nature so that was easy. Like asking what is your code supposed to do and seeing that's not what's happening....
      Everyone is not at the same level you are. He's made is accessible for all.

    • @rosh70
      @rosh70 Год назад +10

      @@Jorsten It's a full university course - an hour per week, 13 weeks. He's giving you a full university (3 credit) course, for FREE. The least you can be, is thankful.

  • @UReasonIt
    @UReasonIt Год назад +29

    C is the language of love! I still have my '78 and '88 White books. Learning to "color inside the lines" in C makes you a super coder in almost any other language. All hail uncle Dennis! (may he RIP)

  • @jpierce2l33t
    @jpierce2l33t Год назад +14

    About 3/4 through with Chuck's PY4E course and its great! Been slacking lately but that's all on me, he's a *fantastic* teacher and such a *gem* for making this freely available to all!

  • @makiyarichard
    @makiyarichard Год назад +3

    The best interview with Dr. Chuck. This was the ultimate pinnacle of computer science I have listened in 40+ minutes on RUclips. Absolute ingenious and made me think of problem solving a little better

  • @azpcox
    @azpcox Год назад +7

    The beauty of C and the ability to abstract the software is that it works both ways. The hardware is now decoupled from the software as well allowing BOTH paths to improve/iterate independent of the other, but but influenced by needs and features wanted. Very great conversation!!!

  • @ronfarmery
    @ronfarmery Год назад +8

    I bought the ‘78 edition of K&R’s C Programming Language book, in ‘78! I used C to write many data communications programs, from emulators to communications servers, and masses of other programs, on all sorts of platforms. I do not agree that C is unsafe; it’s the person who writes the program that usually cuts corners. I’m one of the ‘vintage’ programmers who also believes that, today, programs (call them ‘apps’ if you want to) are not sufficiently tested before being put into production, whatever language they might be written in. Testing, thoroughly testing, is essential.

  • @vardhangoud8851
    @vardhangoud8851 Год назад +30

    New year with 🔥 content from you David sir.

  • @3mar1997
    @3mar1997 Год назад +48

    Dr. Chuck was on 🔥
    I'm currently taking his Django for everybody course and it's been awesome.
    there is so much to learn in the world of computers.
    thank David, such an awesome video.

    • @chestsharma4004
      @chestsharma4004 Год назад

      Does the free courses at his websites also give a certificate for free, if so then what are the steps, or is the degree provided only to the students who paid for it.
      I was wondering if I should do freecodecamp's course as they provide a certificate for free.
      Please give your insights on if I should pursue his course despite not getting any certificates.

    • @andrewdalton6973
      @andrewdalton6973 Год назад +1

      @@chestsharma4004 I don't think certifications will really do much honestly. Just learn as much as you can and makr sure to do as many projects as possible.

    • @chestsharma4004
      @chestsharma4004 Год назад

      @@andrewdalton6973 thanks for the advice.

    • @andrewdalton6973
      @andrewdalton6973 Год назад

      @@chestsharma4004 np

  • @franciscotorres4231
    @franciscotorres4231 Год назад +3

    First time here David. I enjoyed this interview and I really appreciate "your silence" letting the expert share his knowledge. I has great value!!!! Thanks for this and subscribed now...

  • @ithinkthereforeitalk935
    @ithinkthereforeitalk935 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite guests on your youtube channel, David. Thank you!

  • @dickfulthorp2363
    @dickfulthorp2363 Год назад +4

    What is discussed here is what I lived. Started programming in 1967 in an SDS 910 in assembly language. Learned Fortran, then used it on Data General Minicomputers. Wrote a compiler for the DG to create structured assembly. Never heard of C until the first PC's came out with Borland C, then Turbo-C. worked with Motorola 68000's in C, then moved to Freescale Coldfire in C. Application was Communications for Meteor Burst and Line of sight messaging and data acquisition. Not at 83 I sit at home playing with Windows-10 using Microsoft Visual Studio. I never had time or funding to learn C++, but I have all of Stroustrup's books and have read them, but without a motivating project, not started the brain transition.

    • @guytech7310
      @guytech7310 Год назад +1

      C++ isn't any better than C. Just adds layers. I try to avoid using C++ since it makes it a pain if you want to just grab a couple of functions out of C++ class to use them in another project. You could include the entire class, but then you can end up with bloatware. Another annoynance is when people have classes that depend on other classes, which can turn into a spagetti code when your trying to clean up a app or modernize it.

  • @liveleo3418
    @liveleo3418 Год назад +2

    Absolutely pivotal content for me at this point in my coding journey... The Contexts and insights opened the real world of coding up. Suddenly it all makes sense.

  • @cmdrrahul1606
    @cmdrrahul1606 Год назад +3

    Two gems at the same time
    David, you have a great channel which is so focused on what you show and
    Dr Chuck, what a great personality
    I watched the Path to master programmer another superb video with so much gifts in it
    I learnt C on Unix about 20 years back and I fell in love with it
    Have been out of the loop for a while but this post from you and Dr. Chuck
    I am going to brush up on it and while simultaneously checking out RUST.
    More power to you David
    Keep it coming

  • @minor12828
    @minor12828 Год назад +1

    Seems like brain absorbs different when you hear the story from fisrt hand. Great talk/video David. Thanks both for taking the time. 👌👏🙌

  • @zionpsyfer
    @zionpsyfer Год назад

    Awesome interview. A big thanks to Dr Chuck for providing us access to the site. Bonus points for Douglas Adams/racecar password.

  • @franklinrohan5174
    @franklinrohan5174 Год назад +1

    Mr David i am glad that i embarked your channel due to flipper zero and subscribe. Dr Chuck was so inspirational and has kindel the joy of computer science, it's been a tough 2 year of 4 year journey of computer science and have no pasion towards computer science.
    I hope I can change it now, thankyou Dr Chuck.

  • @rickneibauer1
    @rickneibauer1 Год назад +1

    Thank you for bringing on all of these awesome people David. Very cool.

  • @samaelstark5483
    @samaelstark5483 Год назад +1

    I watched Dr Chuck's master programmer video on your channel last night.That video really helped me. I'm all set to take his python course first then django and C. He's really inspirational to me.

  • @landrover827
    @landrover827 Год назад

    Always glad to see and hear Dr. Chuck! ❤🎉

  • @jacquibruce-yokoyama2478
    @jacquibruce-yokoyama2478 Год назад +1

    I like the clear and concise manner that the Professor explains the reasoning behind learning several core languages may be the best way to become competent in programming.
    Thank you and your guest for sharing his valuable insights!

  • @mattwatson3407
    @mattwatson3407 Год назад +3

    WOW! Dr. Chuck! I just finished his intro course to Python on Coursera. Seeing him on David Bombal's channel is a huge validation.

  • @rastgo4432
    @rastgo4432 Год назад +2

    Very awesome, hope to be invited again many times more in the future, thank you David

    • @davidbombal
      @davidbombal  Год назад +2

      Thank you! I hope so too! Dr Chuck is amazing!

  • @daveoatway6126
    @daveoatway6126 Год назад +1

    What a fun interview! I have a copy of the C book - it was one of the first books about programming I bought in late 1970s. I am not a professional programmer but know enough to understand what my professionals do. I totally agree that programming should be taught as a apprentice ship! And finished with a PhD if appropriate for the person. I've played with and created useful things in RCA 1802 machine code, basic, VB, Java, Fortran, MUMPS and Python. Programming should be fun and progressive. Thank you!

  • @QueryTuner
    @QueryTuner Год назад

    I like the Dr. Chuck approach ... got also some of his Coursera courses ... Happy New Year 2023 from Germany !

  • @nickdixon3536
    @nickdixon3536 Год назад +1

    Top notch content as always. Thanks for making these type of videos, any aspiring or growing IT pro should watch this

  • @Manch271
    @Manch271 Год назад

    Thanks Dr. Chuck and David for sharing the knowledge and insights.

  • @d3mist0clesgee12
    @d3mist0clesgee12 Год назад

    great stuff, love these interviews from Dr. Chuck

  • @cowl6867
    @cowl6867 Год назад +7

    Severance is my fav online instructor. He is so fluent and clear with what he teaches and his curriculum is fantastic and goes into depth about every subject before moving on. The best teacher

  • @billdavies6463
    @billdavies6463 Год назад

    A brilliant discussion. I had the benefit of a broad Comp Sci education, thirty years ago, and I find the general concepts are still applicable. I was also involved in certification for network engineers, and Chuck's comments about vendor education is spot-on.

  • @fun_iqp
    @fun_iqp Год назад

    Looking forward to that C and Assembly knowledge from Dr. Chuck, what an exciting year

  • @ahmedscrazymixacm1167
    @ahmedscrazymixacm1167 Год назад +2

    Dr. Chuck really takes the time to make a good course took almost all his courses on coursera, great instructor, he understands how teach without cramping information in students minds without planing

  • @johnadriandodge
    @johnadriandodge Год назад

    Shalom and thank you Dr. C for taking the time to create all the courses you have created and to teach for free.

  • @guillaumedeswardt1323
    @guillaumedeswardt1323 Год назад +9

    I enjoyed this video more than a movie!! I started studying computers in the early 1980s. My favourite programming languages are C, Python, PHP and PC assembler. Nice to see a man of the calibre of Dr Chuck, liking the same stuff as I do. Although I moved into DevOps, programming is still my first love ... and this video motivated me to go back to my first love and do what I love - then a job turns into "playing". I miss playing ... (and getting paid to do it 😀)

    • @eventhisidistaken
      @eventhisidistaken Год назад +2

      I know what you mean. I started programming at age 10 in basic, then moved onto fortran, then to c and then c++ and Java, plus scripting languages and have been programming for almost 50 years now. c++ is my overall favorite, and work often does feel a lot like playtime, even still.

    • @CallousCoder
      @CallousCoder Год назад +1

      So all the old programming geezers end up in DevOps CI/CS 😂 here another one who started programming in 1983 and done a lot of languages and still love assembly. But I’m doing IaC and CI/CD development

  • @joyflowmonger248
    @joyflowmonger248 Год назад +5

    Extraordinary! Thank you! I'll enjoy each of his links! Would you please ask Dr. Chuck to have another podcast with you, discussing AI and ChatGPT? In what ways will AI change the most valuable skills a programmer needs to learn and master?

  • @macavitymacavity126
    @macavitymacavity126 11 месяцев назад

    I'm addicted to this channel. Such interesting quality videos about subjects I didn't know or care before.

  • @matthewbarrett5863
    @matthewbarrett5863 Год назад +3

    Wow, I've been working in the industry for decades, (minor programming "Fortran & Foxbase") and then infrastructure; making sure the servers and networks are optimized for performance. this quick overview on application layer programming has really opened my eyes on how the industry developed.

  • @DS-pk4eh
    @DS-pk4eh Год назад

    Fantastic video and a peek at computer history. Thank you.

  • @maniacZesci
    @maniacZesci Год назад +31

    Rust does not have garbage collection. It is unique among programming languages, it is memory safe without it because it has borrow checker. That is how zero cost abstraction is accomplished, there is no waiting for unused memory to be released automatically.

    • @ChuckSeverance
      @ChuckSeverance Год назад +4

      Thanks - I have not yet dug into Rust - your comment suggests it is a great language for operating system and server development but won't necessarily be the next great general purpose language for all. It is good for a language to have a lane, stay in the lane, and be the perfect solution in its space.

    • @maniacZesci
      @maniacZesci Год назад +4

      @@ChuckSeverance It is hard to predict where Rust will go, but from current threads it seems it will be more lanes rather than one. There are already web servers written in it, graphics libraries for game development and other apps that use graphics, crates for working with databases among many other things.
      There are also web frameworks written in it for web development where it compiles to WASM.
      Rust also has JavaScript interoperability, JS code can be called in Rust and other way around, because it has crates for that too.
      So it is already kind of general purpose language, but will it be accepted and used by most it's hard to say because it is one of the harder ones to learn.

    • @beniscoding
      @beniscoding Год назад +3

      @@ChuckSeverance there is no garbage collection but there is also no manual memory management.
      Rust requires being very explicit about ownerships and lifetimes. So rather than garbage collected automatic memory management, and manual memory management, it is more a kind of declarative memory management.
      This makes it a bit more verbose to write code with. However I do not think it will greatly reduce the scope of what it will be used for.
      It also has a smart way of avoiding specific types of data race concurrency issues which is not found in the popular languages. This makes it a very interesting language for many domains, particularly multithreaded ones. The main one that comes to mind that is not OS and server specific is UI development. UIs nearly always use multiple threads to remain responsive.

    • @eventhisidistaken
      @eventhisidistaken Год назад

      You can do the same thing in c++ with shared_ptr, but yes, it is not enforced by the language itself, it depends on a development team following guidelines.

    • @beniscoding
      @beniscoding Год назад +5

      @@eventhisidistaken I agree that the same is possible in C++ however we have demonstrated over and over again that we were not able to keep to our best practices as a C++ dev industry. Microsoft has spent millions in trying to educate and enforce it for their own code and failed. And seeing the security issues that keep popping up, they are not the only ones who struggled with this.
      Note that rust's memory model is very different to shared_ptr. The semantics are different, what happens at runtime is different, the consequences are different.
      With shared_ptr, you have UPDATES to a counter when a new reference is made with it. If this happens from a different thread, you might start having contention on that counter. I think unique_ptr is closer to what the Rust has integrated rather than shared_ptr. shared_ptr is closer to what garbage collected languages use than what Rust uses as part of the language semantics.
      In Rust, it just being a compile-time check, there is no added runtime work or contention. That being said, a shared_ptr equivalent does exist if needed in Rust (Rc and Arc).
      Note that Rust also checks also forbids a very large category of data race errors. I am unaware of any language having such kind of guarantees about their compiled code.

  • @fabrice9848
    @fabrice9848 Год назад

    This is some instructive material. Thank you both!

  • @geog8964
    @geog8964 Год назад

    Thanks, David and Dr.

  • @creativebeings3262
    @creativebeings3262 Год назад

    Thanks for the great video David bombal and Dr chuck's 😍😍

  • @draco4717
    @draco4717 Год назад

    Eagerly waiting for this course to come out .
    C is love.

  • @ApteraEV2024
    @ApteraEV2024 Год назад +1

    I wish my 1st..& thus Only ,,CS Professor cared as much as Dr. Chuck obviously does...

  • @sinos_karan9515
    @sinos_karan9515 Год назад

    happy new year DAVID sir!! , thank you for another great content..

  • @lucianjohr5569
    @lucianjohr5569 Год назад

    Much respect David. Thanks so so much

  • @Polandisch
    @Polandisch Год назад +6

    Dr Chuck is amazing! Same, for you :D Thank you David for interviewing him!

  • @EdwardVarner
    @EdwardVarner Год назад

    Love listening to both of these gentlemen.

  • @mauriciofloresquezada1583
    @mauriciofloresquezada1583 Год назад

    The editing is brilliant!

  • @felixalvarez7296
    @felixalvarez7296 Год назад

    Very interesting interview, thanks.

  • @gussta1
    @gussta1 Год назад

    Dr. Chuck is so good....Thanks for this David.

  • @Fuzzycap
    @Fuzzycap Год назад

    Dr Chuck...........wow so nice to see him after so long, I remember taking his courses on Coursera!!!!

  • @JoseMaestre
    @JoseMaestre Год назад

    Watching this video is so pleasant, love the way this guy gets excited about his work as a professor and content creator. C is a non intiutive language to learn IMO, looking forward to this course to see if It changes my mind. Thanks @david for this Jewel.

  • @mixtv3668
    @mixtv3668 Год назад +2

    Love you David ❤️❤️ big fan

  • @josechicau7544
    @josechicau7544 Год назад

    Very interesting speech covering the IT evolution rocket by C language. I bought that C book in the late 70's. Even not being a professional programmer I noticed there was something revolutionary in that C language.

  • @mnkeyd
    @mnkeyd Год назад +2

    8 minutes in… this guy is truly passionate and a true master… he wants to make sure that this is passed on and and people understand and able to teach it…

  • @JamReeder
    @JamReeder Год назад +2

    Character oriented processing was being done in the mid-1960's. Commercially it was available in 1968. Operating systems were built using assembler where the programming language(s) were interpreted and thus portable to different machines as the hardware evolved. This was used heavily in medical systems. The time share executive, language interpreter and database were all included in a system which then ran on Digital Equipment, Data General, Tandem, HP, Prime, IBM, and other mini-computers. This was extended to the micro computers when they came about. Our company ran 12 users on a 80286 (PC/AT) back in 1983. Microsoft wondered how we could do it. 🙂So, my point is to say that from my vantage point, 1978 was no magic year as explained in this video.
    BTW: I have a copy of "The C Programming Language" 1978 edition, which is in like new condition. I have worked programming clinical systems since 1974 and have never really had a need to use C, other than to use it for illustrations.

  • @TheBuckaroo987
    @TheBuckaroo987 Год назад

    Wow .. What a trip down memory lane. For the first time, I could relate - from the 262-bit word format for larger mainframe systems to the 8-bit byte for PDP/8e machines back in the day

  • @nathanbanks2354
    @nathanbanks2354 Год назад +3

    Started learning Rust a month ago. No regrets so far. I've done threaded programming in Java, so the memory model seems logical to me, and it's much more organized than C++ where it's easy to ignore smart pointers without marking the unsafe code.

  • @shoumikhasan8654
    @shoumikhasan8654 Год назад +2

    Really beautiful video

  • @dmarks0630
    @dmarks0630 Год назад

    Fascinating interview.

  • @luyokai
    @luyokai Год назад

    This is a content rich talk, in which I don't even feel the time passing by. That is amazing!

  • @SamSepiol127
    @SamSepiol127 Год назад

    You can feel the passion! I love dr chuck ❤

  • @jonathanmwai9567
    @jonathanmwai9567 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this invaluable Video my Career Coach David B.

    • @davidbombal
      @davidbombal  Год назад +2

      Thank you Jonathan! Dr Chuck is amazing and has courses you can take for free :)

  • @emmanuelsherman3066
    @emmanuelsherman3066 Год назад

    The Great Dr., I luv ur deliberation because it's exquisite.

  • @alsadekalkhayer7007
    @alsadekalkhayer7007 Год назад

    Always a treat

  • @aliiiarihahs46
    @aliiiarihahs46 Год назад

    Great Job Sir, vry vry expensive conversation heard in my whole collage life,,, Thank You so much

  • @hilkokriel5659
    @hilkokriel5659 Год назад

    When someone has a clear passion for both technology and education!! Super inspirational!

  • @mhlevy
    @mhlevy Год назад

    My first computer was an Altos 586 running Altos Xenix, and I learned to program in C with the original edition K&R C book, and the AT&T Unix Version 7 programmers manual vol 1 & 2.

  • @yutubl
    @yutubl Год назад +1

    Learning in a practical way what is it and how it can be made is a must for professionals: several technologies and programming languages covering most important concepts, design patterns, use cases is a better start for professional work than learning just one but too deep specialized.
    I learned first foundations (mathematics, physics, hardware: electricity, electronics, circuits, micro electronics chips) and after that software (BASIC, Assembler, Fortran, C, Pascal, C++, Java, C#, JavaScript, SQL).

  • @MFoster392
    @MFoster392 Год назад

    Dr Chuck is a great and knowledgeable teacher another great guest David

  • @irfanrashidbhatti9144
    @irfanrashidbhatti9144 Год назад

    Very informative, thanks David ---- and answer is 42

  • @alvaropenatube
    @alvaropenatube Год назад

    ¡ Happy New Year 2023 ! ¡ Happy Coding New Year ! I really enjoyed and learned from this video

  • @joshgibson3618
    @joshgibson3618 Год назад

    Great video! What’s coming next from iso C2x?

  • @emmetgwilliam6527
    @emmetgwilliam6527 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the great video on python tools and C very interesting and great programming languages

  • @userct
    @userct Год назад +4

    If you really want to have a high paygrade programming job, learn javascript, typescript, nodeJS and react. Those pay a looooooot and are in higher demand than any of the languages mentioned in the video.

  • @TheIgnoredCorner
    @TheIgnoredCorner Месяц назад

    Dr. Chuck's tone is like someone who has found the true potential of Knowledge. His tone tells that he only wants Programming KNOWLEDGE from this world, nothing else.

  • @arturorubio7958
    @arturorubio7958 Год назад

    I love learning , excellent content

  • @Kevin_Long
    @Kevin_Long Год назад +3

    This was really great to watch, but I'm interested to know why no reference was made to C# and the CLR.

  • @BobBob-qm2bm
    @BobBob-qm2bm Год назад +2

    The knowledge just flows when Dr Chuck is in the house. Congrats to both of your for educating the community with real and relevant knowledge.

  • @kal_dev
    @kal_dev Год назад

    Thanks for this super video

  • @jagatkrishna1543
    @jagatkrishna1543 Год назад +1

    Thanks 🙏

  • @Enterprise_IT_support
    @Enterprise_IT_support Год назад +1

    A long years ago, this book(C M.Ritchie) was rare in sovet union , we had done hand copy this book in our writing books.

  • @TomokoAbe_
    @TomokoAbe_ Год назад

    C is really the best programming to learn. To really learn the fine points, assembly language. The beauty of assembly language you can absolute control including the size of sound waves. You do not have that kind of control with C. I still have my TASM compiler backed up from my original Borland disks! TASM is the best compiler you can get for assembly language and I'm glad I have a copy of it. That being said, for practicality, COBOL (Common Business Oriented Language) is still widely used in business such as ATM machines, payroll and accounting applications; it's been around since 1959 and still highly used. COBOL is not going away.

  • @mrmoonmoon
    @mrmoonmoon Год назад

    Dr. Chuck rocks!🎉

  • @AttenBot
    @AttenBot Год назад +2

    42. The meaning of life, the universe, and everything.

  • @tedd9621
    @tedd9621 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @wassimfritah9147
    @wassimfritah9147 Год назад

    dr chuck was on fire. just amazing!

  • @futuregootecks
    @futuregootecks Год назад

    This man is such an inspiration! Wish I woulda found him sooner.

  • @hichamel-fezzazi1430
    @hichamel-fezzazi1430 Год назад

    Thanks master David from Morocco 💪

  • @ruby2thursday
    @ruby2thursday 3 месяца назад

    i've given away at least 3 copies of the earlier C book and still have 2 more and a newer copy. fantastic piece of software history.

  • @amrendragiant
    @amrendragiant Год назад

    Lots of love and happy new yar David from India🇮🇳

  • @fabrice9848
    @fabrice9848 Год назад

    I really enjoyed the message to Apple at the end of the video. It would be great if they could hear it.

  • @migalito1955
    @migalito1955 Год назад

    Interesting.
    In the late 90's I became injured on a job site and went back to the University and at first studied mathematics followed by obtaining a graduate degree in theoretical mathematics with emphasis on probability. However as a undergraduate I minored in computer science thus learned the high level flavor of the day aka C++ and later Fortran 90 because I worked as a graduate assistant for an atmospheric scientist.
    I actually found high level language coding fun and like being on vacation compared to theoretical mathematics where really understanding why a theorem is valid can be a several days long journey full of wrong assumptions with coding more like building a house using pre-defined functions rather than studs and joists.
    Now, at age 67 and being years since I coded my memory of syntax has pretty much disappeared with respect to Fortran 90 and C++, but not the essential or underlying functionality of features of coding. Thus, today having a desire to code again for a project I have on my horizon I find Python which I am teaching myself an easy and fun endeavor.
    Now, if you look at low level languages which I find very interesting because it provides a much deeper understanding of the machine itself fun or seeming like taking a vacation from theoretical mathematics is a different story.....

  • @PointEndClick
    @PointEndClick Год назад

    This video is awesome.

  • @gwine9087
    @gwine9087 Год назад +5

    I wrote code for 45 years. I still have some running in governments and Fortune 500 companies and, believe it or not, none of it was written in C.

    • @Soso-ho2si
      @Soso-ho2si 11 месяцев назад +1

      What language they were written in ?

  • @android_plus7436
    @android_plus7436 Год назад +3

    Bro 👏👏🔥

  • @philmarsh7723
    @philmarsh7723 Год назад +2

    I needed some high-performance numerical computing for my own engineering software. I used Ebay rather than Amazon for servers. Great deals on old servers on Ebay.
    Rust might be superior to C++, but I highly doubt that I can find the libraries I need for math calculations there, e.g. optimization, GUI development, etc... And Java's huge flaw is that as far as I know, it doesn't have a complex number data type nor the possibility of creating one (no operator overloading).

  • @firstmo7941
    @firstmo7941 Год назад

    God bless you bro 👍