Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Are Delphi/Pascal being taught in any high schools/colleges/universities, particularly in Canada and the US?

I was surprised how many schools in the UK are teaching Delphi. Their largest exam board is even dropping PHP/C#/C in 2011 and encouraging Delphi. I also remember that CodeGear was going to provide development tool licenses to Russian schools a couple of years ago.

I'd like to know if it's being taught closer to (my) home.

Update: Found a bunch in the US and UK along with other countries, but just a few hints in Canada.

share|improve this question

closed as not constructive by Kay, Ben D, icyrock.com, Michael Perrenoud, Arian Mar 17 at 21:45

As it currently stands, this question is not a good fit for our Q&A format. We expect answers to be supported by facts, references, or specific expertise, but this question will likely solicit debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. If you feel that this question can be improved and possibly reopened, see the FAQ for guidance.

24 Answers

I live in the Netherlands. In 1996-1997 I learnt Turbo Pascal at school and later on we started with Delphi exercises.

I picked up another study around 2003. Delphi was not taught any longer. They just switched to Java, but by then Delphi7 and JBuilder were still installed on most of the pc's, or you could easily install it via the network.

Some months ago I was back. I saw that Delphi was nowhere to be found. The only slightly related product that was available was an ancient version of Turbo C :-).

The halls were full of posters of free C# workshops organised by Microsoft (!), and Visual Studio was installed on every PC. It looks like Microsoft is actively trying to win souls while Embarcadero just sits and waits until developers come.

Instead of charging huge amounts of money for licences, Embarcadero should invest in students who are willing to use their products.

share|improve this answer
I've seen it coming back here and there. But it is still a shadow of what it was – Marco van de Voort Aug 21 '10 at 11:36

I am from Russia. Delphi was huge in Russia in late 90s-early 2000s, and is still taught in an average university as a principal programming environment. The book stores are full of Pascal/Delphi stuff. In higher-profile universities, like Baumann, C/C++ is taught.

share|improve this answer
up vote 4 down vote accepted

I didn't learn Pascal in school and didn't see a single line of Pascal code until several years later when a friend introduced me to Delphi 1 in 1995. Since then, I have used Oracle Designer 2000 (never again), Java, C# and even a little bit of VB (classic/script/.Net). I use C# regularly now, but Delphi is still my first choice for any development. More times than not, it's just the right tool for a given job.

I found some schools in the US that are teaching Delphi or Pascal. I tried to only include examples that are in the most recent course calendars, and if I couldn't find a calendar, ones that are in the site's course description list. I would look for more, but it's a little tedious.

I also found several Delphi specific courses in the UK and a handful in India, Bangladesh and South Africa. I didn't include these because the list is already a little long.

Enterprise State Community College, Enterprise, Alabama

  • CIS 191 - INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTER SCIENCE I
  • CIS 222 - ADVANCED PASCAL PROGRAMMING

Berkeley (EECS) Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, Berkeley, California

  • CS 9B - Pascal for Programmers

Glendale Community College, Glendale, California

  • CSIS130 - Introduction to Algorithms with Pascal

Los Angeles City College, Los Angeles, California

  • COSCI 106 - Beginning Pascal Programming

Pasadena City College, Pasadena, California

  • CS 10 - PASCAL

Santa Barbara City College, Santa Barbara, California

  • CS 145P - Introduction To Data Structures

Mission College, Santa Clara, California

  • CIS 004A - COMPUTER PROGRAMMING I (PASCAL)
  • CIS 004B - COMPUTER PROGRAMMING II (PASCAL)
  • CIS 036 - PASCAL PROGRAMMING
  • CIS 171 - COMPUTER LAB: PASCAL
  • CIS 171A - COMPUTER LAB: INTRODUCTION PROGRAMMING IN PASCAL
  • CIS 171B - COMPUTER LAB: ADVANCED PASCAL

Los Angeles Mission College, Sylmar, California

  • CoSci 406 - BEGINNING PASCAL PROGRAMMING
  • CoSci 436 - INTRODUCTION TO DATA STRUCTURES

College of the Sequoias?, Visalia, California

  • MATH 16 - COMPUTER SCIENCE I - PASCAL

Los Angeles Harbor College, Wilmington, California

  • MATH 170 - Introduction to PASCAL

Seminole State College of Florida, Orlando, Florida

  • CCP - Certified Computing Professional

Atlanta Technical College, Atlanta, Georgia

  • CIS 257 - PASCAL PROGRAMMING
  • ELC 204 - HIGH-LEVEL LANGUAGES

Truman College, Chicago, Illinois

  • CIS 032 0107 - Introduction to PASCAL

Joliet Junior College, Joliet, Illinois

  • CIS 136 - PASCAL Programming

University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana

  • CSCI-152 - Pascal Programming

Ivy Tech Community College, Muncie, Indiana

  • CINS 124 - Pascal Programming

Midway College, Midway, Kentucky

  • CS 280 - Pascal Programming I
  • CS 380 - Pascal Programming II

University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, Mississippi

  • CSS 330 - Introduction to Programming
  • CSS 340 - Advanced Computing Programming

University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey

  • BINF7590 - Genetic Engineering, Protein Modeling and Drug Design
  • BINF7592 - Computer Aided  Drug Design &QSAR/QSPR

New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico

  • OECS 170 - PASCAL Programming I

State University of New York at Potsdam, Potsdam, New York

  • CIS 102 - Introduction to Pascal Programming  

Southeastern Oklahoma State University, Durant, Oklahoma

  • CS 1513 - PASCAL PROGRAMMING
  • CS 1523 - ADVANCED PASCAL PROGRAMMING
  • CS 2510 - SEMINAR IN PROGRAMMING

Murray State College, Tishomingo, Oklahoma

  • CS 2123 - Pascal Programming I
  • CS 2223 - Advanced Pascal
  • CS 2123 - Pascal Programming I
  • CS 2223 - Advanced Pascal

Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

  • CSCE 110 - Programming I

University of Houston-Clear Lake, Houston, Texas

  • CSCI 3132.01 - Programming in Pascal

Texarkana College, Texarkana, Texas

  • BCIS1312 or COSC1318 - Pascal Programming
  • COSC1319 - Assembly Language
  • GAME 1343 - Game & Simulation Programming I:

Salt Lake Community College, Salt Lake City, Utah

  • CS 2510 - Intermediate Prog In Delphi

Virginia's Community Colleges, , Virginia

  • ITP 156 - PASCAL Programming I
  • EGR 125 - Introduction to Engineering Methods
  • EGR 127 - Introduction to Computer Programming
  • EGR 126 - Computer Programming for Engineers
share|improve this answer

In the Arabs countries especially in Saudi Arabia it was one of the best languages they were teaching in colleges but not any more, however, for my self i learned it Delphi by my self and i will never let it go.. :)

In the other side, Delphi still demanded by some of the biggest companies such as SAUDI ARAMCO ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_Aramco )

share|improve this answer

In highschool I took turbo Pascal classes. In college I took a 100 level course in pascal but that was 13 years ago (wow..that makes me feel old). Most of my schooling in college was handled in Resolve C++(a hateful language). My last job had a legacy application built up in Delphi 2006.

So my point is its been around a long time and there are still those who treasure Delphi.

share|improve this answer

In Indonesia, 1994, first programming language is C. Turbo Pascal and Delphi were installed in the novell network, we just learn it by doing and ask the seniors. Today, they start with Java. Now I speak Delphi 2010.

share|improve this answer

I'm from the Philippines. As far as i know, i am the only Delphi-User here, never met one. I wish i could meet one here. Anyways, i love Pascal based languages - Delphi 7 or Delphi 2009. Delphi 3 was introduce by German Guest Speaker in our school when i was in First Year College, that's 1999. I was amazed and very interested with its shown features so i bought books to learn it - self study. I actually abandoned VB and FoxPro that time because of Delphi. I have developed more than 30 applications systems now, including Little-ERP System, POS, Accounting Systems, School Systems, Hospital Systems, Wholesales/Retail Systems, Recruitment Agencies, Travel Agencies, Lending Systems, Gasoline Station Systems, Freight & Cargo Systems, Payroll with Biometrics capabilities, Warehousing/Inventory Systems and many more...

The only thing that i notice is that few and peculiar programmers use Delphi because few knows how to teach it. As i said, humble but confident, Delphi Users can really make a fortune out of this Language.

Anything about Delphi, maybe i can help, you can Email me at multisyscorp@yahoo.com

JonDave

share|improve this answer
Peculiar? Well, if I'm any indication, I certainly can't argue against that. :) – Bruce McGee May 30 '10 at 13:27
If you're looking for Delphi developers and positions in the Philippines, you might be in luck. A Google search with the terms DELPHI DEVELOPMENT PHILIPPINES turns up a few. – Bruce McGee May 30 '10 at 13:31

Delphi is also taught in schools/universities throughout Brazil. Also Delphi and Turbo Pascal are used in state run high schools and colleges in Russia. You will also find Delphi used in some non-computer science departments where the students are focused on other majors and use programming in a "situational" or "occupational" way - for example, the Geography students at Ferris State University in Wisconsin use Delphi for their maps projects.

share|improve this answer
Really good example. – Bruce McGee Jun 3 '10 at 21:37

I am from Azerbaijan. Most of our high schools and universities still teaching Pascal and Delphi as an introductory programming language course.

share|improve this answer

I'm from Germany and during my apprenticeship I learned ... Delphi... at school! But I know that since this year they're teaching Java. I'm glad for all those who will not have the "privilege" to fight against "Units", "Interfaces" and class declarations in Delphi! :)

EDIT 1: Yes, I know Canada is on the other side of the globe :)

EDIT 2: We were using a non-professional and old version of the IDE delphi, so it was very uncomfortable to develop even little applications. ^_^ (BTW: C# RUUUULES)

share|improve this answer
1  
If you know any schools actively teaching Delphi in Germany, that would be interesting, too. – Bruce McGee May 25 '10 at 20:13
2  
Pascal wasn't my first programming language, but I'm a really big fan of the Interface section, now. With apologies to Mr. Heston; "from my cold dead hands" :) – Bruce McGee May 25 '10 at 20:19

I learned Java in University in Canada, but I never heard anyone learned Delphi/Pascal in school except my CS professor.

share|improve this answer
What year did you graduate? Many canadian universites used Pascal during the 1980s and part of the 1990s, but switched circa 1995 (at the height of the Java craze) to Java. – Warren P May 31 '10 at 13:21
I was graduated in 2007. – garconcn May 31 '10 at 19:27

In Switzerland we're learning Java and C++ and C on a mandatory basis and some other languages optionally.

And because it was invented by a professor of the neighbouring university we also had an short switch to Eiffel.

During school we also had a look at Turbo Pascal.

share|improve this answer

I just checked a few local (Seattle area) community college sites to see what they were offering for Intro to Computer Programming / Science. Both were offering C++ courses as their introductory courses.

share|improve this answer

In Italy in 1990-91 at University I learned Pascal and Modula 2 on a mandatory basis. Then C/C++ by myself because it was necessary for several programming projects. Now they're learning Java or C#.

share|improve this answer

I have learned C, C++ and Delphi while I was studing (a few years ago). I fell in love with Delphi when I began to use it. After I finished they switched to C# instead of Delphi.

share|improve this answer

I am a current high school student in Canada, and I know that certain schools are still teaching Pascal.

My former high school taught using Turbo Pascal in a Grade 10 programming class (as of two years ago). That school teaches using C++ and Java in the higher Grades. Pascal is getting rarer though, and is being replaced by C++, Python, Java, and VB.

share|improve this answer
Can you say which schools? At least which cities? – Bruce McGee May 30 '10 at 13:08
I'm in Toronto, and the schools are located in North York in the Toronto District School Board. – phsource May 30 '10 at 16:22
Just as in England, many teachers (in their 40s and 50s) would have learned Pascal for DOS in their teachers-college days, and will continue to teach pascal in high school. The goal of the Ontario curriculum is to expose the student to structured and object-oriented programming concepts: Meet the variable. Meet the for loop. Meet the object and learn how to make one and write the data-fields and methods for it. Personally I teach my 13 year old son Python because of the feedback advantage of using "immediate mode". – Warren P May 31 '10 at 13:23
Thanks. I live in Toronto, too. Do you have any direct references? I can't find anything specific online. This is confused by the fact that there is a "Delphi Secondary Alternative School" in Scarborough and an annual Pascal contest that isn't related to the programming language. – Bruce McGee Jun 1 '10 at 11:42
Hi, I can't find any direct references, but I was at Marc Garneau C.I. when I learned Pascal. – phsource Jun 2 '10 at 22:06

I am from China, and here Pascal is still taught in high schools, but for some but not all students.

However, the exam/competition held for high school students still use Turbo Pascal which is so old and it seems that Embarcadero never tries to show them how good Turbo Delphi is (maybe that's becaue Turbo Delphi disappears now).

In universities, C/C++ is still the king, while Java and C# can give you advantages at graduate.

I personally started in Delphi and now switch to C#.

share|improve this answer

Here in Mexico is the same story: Turbo Pascal was used by teachers as the first language to teach programming until mid 90's, then switched to Java or VB (:of)

Maybe Java is just more appropiate language as it is supposed to be "open" and "free" and there is a 20% of the programmers around the globe using it... but I learned with Basic, then Pascal, then I did step over Delphi, and that is kind of common curve around here, ( besides clipper -> foxpro -> ¿? )

I don't know about schools teaching Delphi right now. And no Borland/CodeGear/Embarcadero did something to change this, neither schools seems to be concerned to switch...

share|improve this answer

I'm from Singapore. Did my university in Australia. Was taught Delphi 1 as a first year unit (1996), but already knew some Pascal before. Now I think they only teaches Java / C#... what a pity!

Started my first job in Perth using D3, then D5. Back to Singapore, got a job doing D3 and D5, moved on to several other jobs, all Delphi related. Now in IBM, soon to be starting on a project that will be migrating a legacy system written in D7 to D2010.

But I have to admit that it is hard to get Delphi jobs in Singapore, if any. I hope to move on to Java, purely for financial reason, but will always be using Delphi for any Windows native app.

Delphi ROCKS and long live Delphi!

share|improve this answer
I've heard that IBM uses Delphi in a lot of their locations, including their Canadian offices. – Bruce McGee Jun 15 '10 at 11:48

I am from Latvia, Rīga.

I learned a little bit of Turbo Pascal in school.

Then, in high school (Riga Technical University), we learned Borland Delphi and Borland C++. Most of practice (laboratory?) work on other subjects, such as Data structures, were performed in Pascal/Delphi.

share|improve this answer

I'm from Germany, too. We had Pascal at high school, later a little Delphi. In university I learned, that it's a nice educational language and in retrospect I partially agree. If I had known what I know today, I'd rather learned python and C at school.

share|improve this answer

University of Western Ontario (London, Ontario) taught Pascal as the first year language from about 1987 to 1996 or so. THey switched to Java, and at some point, may have switched from that to something else.

I was not personally aware of any Canadian high schools that had computer science teachers that teach Pascal any more, but my high school (South Secondary, London) taught Commodore BASIC for the early 1980s, then Turbo Pascal for DOS when the switched to PCs around 1989.

Pascal is still considered suitable by the Ontario curriculum standards, which would allow almost any language, as far as I know, if it is what the teacher knows how to teach. I would expect to run into pockets of Visual Basic, and Java at most high-schools in Canada.

Efforts to enforce a single language across Ontario schools would be doomed by the teaching staff's variable set of skills and experience. But I don't doubt that we'll see Microsoft give some money to someone, to make C# into the "language they teach you in school". (sarcasm alert)

As I am Canadian, I do not know much about the USA. But from the book-store content, it is plain that Pascal (and delphi in particular) are not high-profile languages in either the USA or Canada anymore. I use Delphi all day at work, professionally, and it's a fabulous tool, but I do not think many students are learning it any more, in Canada or the US.

share|improve this answer

The boyfriend of my niece is using Delphi 2010 at the Technical University in Delft. It seems they've been using Delphi 2010 for a few years now (don't know why they didn't upgrade to the latest version, will have to ask)...

share|improve this answer

I started out in a basic intro class using Pascal (which a couple of the posts in the last 4 or so pages right now brings me back to since they were assignments then). That's really the only time it was exclusively focused upon. I subsequently did a Data Structures class which involved C more than Pascal. Other than that, any other Pascal/Delphi oriented things I've done have all been a result of self-education. Everything else involved other languages.

I understand the school that offered this class is now using Java...

share|improve this answer

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.