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Is it just me or are most colleges teaching Java instead of C++ these days? I feel like I've been missing out with having zero classes teach or use C++ at all.

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Many universities also do not teach basic concepts such as pointer arithmetic and recursion. I was actually told by one of my professors not to use pointer arithmetic, but to use array index notation instead. What? Do they think that we cannot grasp these concepts, that they are too difficult? This is fine if all I want to do is go and write banking software, but what if I want to write the next programming language or a web server? I for one am very disappointed in the education that I have received thus far. If only I could go to MIT...

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The only languages I was "taught" in school were Pascal (this was 20 years ago) and 80x86 assembler. Every other language we used in school, we taught ourselves.

Java is a reasonable choice for an introductory programming course, but students who don't learn anything else are going to be at a disadvantage when they look for jobs after school.

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Java is, in a sense, easier to learn because it hides pointers from the programmer. It allows newer programmers to easily write programs that have dynamic memory for assets such as text, graphics, and input, unlike C++ where memory must be handled by hand or by using a smart pointer, which beginners may not know exist until they find them.

A second reason is that companies are writing programs in Java because of the easier learning curve which produces a larger pool of programmers to hire. Java will also run on any machine that has a JVM - Windows, Mac, Linux, and many cell phones as well. Write it once, run it everywhere!

However, there is a niche where the lower level capabilities of C++ comes in handy - embedded systems programming. Many such devices have memory mapped IO that cannot be accessed without using pointers, thus rendering the higher level languages nearly unusable.

In the end though, it should really come down to using the correct tool for the problem.

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I just finished four years at Virginia Tech as a Computer Science undergrad. My languages in coursework went as follows:

  • Java in high school, as the AP Computer Science exam had gone to Java that year.
  • Java for Intro to Object-Oriented Programming
  • C++ for Object-Oriented Analysis and Design
  • C++ for Data Structures (PR-quad trees, B-trees, 2-3 trees, binary search trees)
  • C for OS (extending PintOS from Stanford with userland programs, a filesystem, virtual memory, and multi-threading and dynamic priority scheduling).

All things considered, I think it's a great way to go about it. I learned object-oriented from the ground up, without a lot of language syntax (I'm looking at you, C++, and your pure virtual templated function syntax); I learned pointers and detailed memory management once I was comfortable with basic object-oriented principles, and learned to blow my foot off with C in OS.

Working now on OS X and iPhone applications using Objective-C and Cocoa, I feel completely comfortable handling high-level object abstractions in Cocoa, and handling memory with retain-release memory management in Obj-C.

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I think it's a combination of two things:

1 - Most jobs out there right now are Java. Schools look better by producing Java experts because they enter jobs without needing to be trained in the language.

2 - It's easier to teach a concept like Operating Systems or HTTP Networking when you can just focus on the concepts and not have the students worrying about things like memory management.

I finished college about 5 years ago, it was ALL Java except for a couple of specialized courses where C++ or C were used. For example in Game Programming we used Direct X, in Graphics Programming we used OpenGL, etc.

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I was in the business school in college and our first programming class was C++. This of course was not C++ for majors, but it still gave me a bad feeling that I wouldn't do well in the class.

I think teaching core concepts is the most important part though: Java is probably a better language to teach programming/OOP core concepts with. C++ has lots of idiosyncracies that you have to learn about (or maybe less idiosyncracies and more that it's 'pure OOP'?), which would get in the way of the teaching.

Java tends to have a more universal feel to a business major that does teach better OOP concepts than C++. But then again, in my C++ class, we really only went through basic programming concepts.

My only Java class was my senior year when it was my "senior OOP" class. It was great at teaching me how to program the topics I learned in my Object Design class from my jr year.

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I think it also depends on what school you go to. Some schools that may not have a focus on technical skills and lean more towards liberal arts or even just a generally larger college might believe that Java is easier to learn and has a quicker satisfaction. (Applets and quick programs that do things).

I go to a college known for engineering. Here the intro to the CS degree is taught with Python. Then OO moves on with Java, then Assembly and C.

However, the only CS the vast majority take is taught with MATLAB.

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I think that demand from industry has played the biggest role. That is to say, demand from industry, filtered through the university bureaucracy, and mixed with pressure to keep up graduation rates.

Java is the easy choice. It's not as hard to pick up as C, it can't be called 'too academic' the way functional languages often are, but it feels ever so slightly more hardcore, than say, PHP. Personally I'd wish that my first year class (I'm in third) had been taught in Scheme, but I can just play with that on my own.

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I think it's about levels of abstraction. Java is generally taught as an introductory course because as an introduction students do not need to know about things like memory management or pointers. Over a degree these abstractions are given more detail and students can begin to understand where abstractions leak.

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This immediately made me think of slashdot rant threads.

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First of all, don't take a course that is only meant to teach you a language. Unless it's a completely different way of thinking from what you're used to, it'll be a big waste of time. Take courses that focus on algorithms and the like. If the material can't be applied to another language, then it's practically useless in the long run.

I imagine that the reason schools choose Java is because it frees them from having to talk about pointers. I could see that making the job much easier.

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I also think it's a case of Java has an ability to quickly bring forward the visual side of programming, of getting an app that really does something visually for the student to experience. C/C++ and a console app, just doesn't set most people's heart buzzing. Granted C and derived languages can do visuals pretty easily, but Java just does it faster.

In talking with teachers/professors at my school a lot of them said that the first CS course was to get kids hooked on programming, and a slick app is a really easy way to do that.

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It depends on the University. I think teaching core concepts is the most important part though: Java is probably a better language to teach programming/OOP core concepts with. C++ has lots of idiosyncracies that you have to learn about (or maybe less idiosyncracies and more that it's 'pure OOP'?), which would get in the way of the teaching.

That said, the University I'm attending started with C as the basic language and uses C++ to teach OOP. Java's in there somewhere though.

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I'd imagine better corporate uptake, better OO support and all round better exposure.

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Colleges believe that Java is easier to learn and easier to teach. There is also a push to give students "real world" experience and in the "real world" Java Programming ability, regardless of real value, is generally considered to be more valuable to C++ programming ability.

I don't claim that this common belief is right, but it is prevalent among project managers and interviewers.

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It's been that way for quite a while; many of the Universities here in Australia teach Java over C++ because it's more mainstream - and modern. Mind you, when I went to Uni I got to do two semesters of COBOL and only one of C, so...

Mainstream means that having learned Java, it's a skill you can take out into the real world and apply to a corporate job. C++ is rarely used in greenfield development nowadays, replaced by Java J2EE.

Modern is desirable because things like resource management - memory handing et al - are the kinds of things that ought to be handled by the language, not the programmer. Programmers ought to be solving problems, not ensuring that every new is matched by a delete. That kind of argument is persuasive to the Lecturers who set syllabuses.

So I put it all down to pragmatism.

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