DocumentCode :
2496087
Title :
Seven deadly sins of introductory programming language design
Author :
McIver, L. ; Conway, Damian
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Monash Univ., Clayton, Vic., Australia
fYear :
1996
fDate :
24-27 Jan 1996
Firstpage :
309
Lastpage :
316
Abstract :
Discusses seven undesirable features that are common to many programming languages used to teach first-time programmers: (1) less is more; (2) more is more; (3) grammatical traps; (4) hardware dependence; (5) backwards compatibility; (6) excessive cleverness; and (7) violation of expectations. We illustrate typical pedagogical difficulties which stem from these features, with examples drawn from the programming languages ABC, Ada, C, C++, Eiffel, Haskell, LISP, Modula 3, Pascal, Prolog, Scheme and Turing. We propose seven language design (or selection) principles which may reduce the incidence of such undesirable features: (1) start where the novice is; (2) differentiate semantics with syntax; (3) make the syntax readable and consistent; (4) provide a small and orthogonal set of features; (5) be especially careful with I/O; (6) provide better error diagnosis; and (7) choose a suitable level of abstraction
Keywords :
computer science education; high level languages; teaching; ABC; Ada; C language; C++ language; Eiffel; Haskell; LISP; Modula 3; Pascal; Prolog; Scheme; Turing; abstraction level; backwards compatibility; consistent syntax; error diagnosis; excessive cleverness; expectation violation; first-time programmer teaching; grammar; hardware dependence; input/output mechanisms; introductory programming language design; language design principles; language selection principles; novice programmers; pedagogical difficulties; readability; semantics; small orthogonal feature set; undesirable features; Collaboration; Computer languages; Education; Encapsulation; Handicapped aids; Machine learning; Problem-solving; Programming profession; Silicon compounds;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering: Education and Practice, 1996. Proceedings. International Conference
Conference_Location :
Dunedin
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7379-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SEEP.1996.534015
Filename :
534015
Link To Document :
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