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digitalmars.D.announce - The D in Novosibirsk State University

reply "Michael" <pr m1xa.com> writes:
Yes, Russia)

Topic: The D Programming Language: features and application.
Author: Nikolai Tolstokulakov.

Event: NSU Tech Talks
Date: Nov 05, 2013

Slides: 
https://speakerdeck.com/techtalksnsu/iazyk-proghrammirovaniia-d-nikolai-tolstokulakov

Tweet: https://twitter.com/TechTalksNSU/status/397378969156075521
Nov 10 2013
next sibling parent "Ilya Yaroshenko" <ilyayaroshenko gmail.com> writes:
On Sunday, 10 November 2013 at 20:05:29 UTC, Michael wrote:
 Yes, Russia)

 Topic: The D Programming Language: features and application.
 Author: Nikolai Tolstokulakov.

 Event: NSU Tech Talks
 Date: Nov 05, 2013

 Slides: 
 https://speakerdeck.com/techtalksnsu/iazyk-proghrammirovaniia-d-nikolai-tolstokulakov

 Tweet: 
 https://twitter.com/TechTalksNSU/status/397378969156075521
Wow, Great! MSU switched from Pascal to C and from 16-bit MASM to 32-bit fasm one year ago :-(. I hope Academic City has more flexible program) Please post it in СУНЦ НГУ! Best Regards, Ilya
Nov 10 2013
prev sibling next sibling parent reply "Froglegs" <barf barf.com> writes:
  Slides are in English, do most Russian programmers speak English?
Nov 10 2013
next sibling parent reply "Dicebot" <public dicebot.lv> writes:
On Sunday, 10 November 2013 at 23:19:22 UTC, Froglegs wrote:
  Slides are in English, do most Russian programmers speak 
 English?
No. However, most really interested in programming technology do. Pretty much as in any other part of the world.
Nov 10 2013
parent Marco Leise <Marco.Leise gmx.de> writes:
Am Mon, 11 Nov 2013 00:35:09 +0100
schrieb "Dicebot" <public dicebot.lv>:

 On Sunday, 10 November 2013 at 23:19:22 UTC, Froglegs wrote:
  Slides are in English, do most Russian programmers speak 
 English?
No. However, most really interested in programming technology do. Pretty much as in any other part of the world.
Reminds me how I ended up in a 100% Russian bug tracker once, when I wanted to report a bug for a big, world-wide online game with localizations into 8 or more languages. In the end I used Google translate. (They do offer technical support in English, but I didn't want to deal with 1st level support and have mails going forth and back just to report an obvious bug. :p) -- Marco
Nov 10 2013
prev sibling parent "Michael" <pr m1xa.com> writes:
On Sunday, 10 November 2013 at 23:19:22 UTC, Froglegs wrote:
  Slides are in English, do most Russian programmers speak 
 English?
Not only programmers and English. It's mix of education, culture and pro activity (Internet helps). Also additional language adds additional + to karma ;)
Nov 11 2013
prev sibling parent "Joakim" <joakim airpost.net> writes:
On Sunday, 10 November 2013 at 20:05:29 UTC, Michael wrote:
 Yes, Russia)

 Topic: The D Programming Language: features and application.
 Author: Nikolai Tolstokulakov.

 Event: NSU Tech Talks
 Date: Nov 05, 2013

 Slides: 
 https://speakerdeck.com/techtalksnsu/iazyk-proghrammirovaniia-d-nikolai-tolstokulakov
Heh, funny to see this said about D in slide 6, "It is complex (more 100 keywords vs 50 in Java)," especially since one of the selling points of D1 was its simplicity compared to C++. I suppose in the feature race with C++, it was inevitable that that would get lost along the way. Still, interesting to see that is now the public perception of D2 also. Regarding the slide deck, nice job of summarizing D2 and pulling out the unique features that would interest new users. :)
Nov 11 2013