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Sep 17th, 2002, 04:53 PM
#1
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Run!
my AP Comp teacher wants to start teaching MFC!!!!!!!!!1
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Sep 17th, 2002, 09:07 PM
#2
Frenzied Member
Shoot him, and take his job.
Or simply report him to the schools admin... MFC has NOTHING to do with the AP curriculum.
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 06:47 AM
#3
Monday Morning Lunatic
Shoot him, and give me his bloody job
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Sep 18th, 2002, 08:28 AM
#4
Frenzied Member
Most stories of computer science teachers make me half want to teach...
"apvector... bah! apstring... bah! apstack.... bah! std::vector, string, stack!"
Sure, they might fail the test, but they will be able to program =).
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 08:33 AM
#5
Monday Morning Lunatic
What is the point of teaching completely different things to the language?
The whole point of the Standard Library is that it *is* part of the language, in the same way that you'd get laughed down in C for not using strlen, etc., without a bloody good reason.
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:19 AM
#6
Frenzied Member
Supposedly, the ap classes are easier to understand. Not that anyone ever teaches what is inside of them. Regardless, its idiotic.
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:22 AM
#7
Monday Morning Lunatic
The Standard Library is easy enough to understand, if you're taught the principles behind it 
*sigh*
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Sep 18th, 2002, 11:29 AM
#8
Frenzied Member
So teach a class then Parksie, you have nothing else to do right?
I would take it, I want to learn more on STL
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Sep 18th, 2002, 11:31 AM
#9
Frenzied Member
parksie is overqualified for the position. In fact, he knows something... =).
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 11:34 AM
#10
Monday Morning Lunatic
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
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Sep 18th, 2002, 05:21 PM
#11
What's AP curriculum?
Nobody should force MFC on anyone! It must be a free decision to use it or not. And I see great danger in programming teachers teaching MFC. *shiver*
bad programming is bad, but bad MFC programming is worse!
All the buzzt
 CornedBee
"Writing specifications is like writing a novel. Writing code is like writing poetry."
- Anonymous, published by Raymond Chen
Don't PM me with your problems, I scan most of the forums daily. If you do PM me, I will not answer your question.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 06:13 PM
#12
Frenzied Member
The AP Tests are a set of tests put together by The College Board (www.collegeboard.com), for students planning to attend colleges which accept the tests. If you get a high score (scores from 0..5), you can get x number of credits per test you take. For most of the tests, this can be pretty tough, but the CS one is quite easy. There are 40 multiple choice questions, as well as 6 free response questions (the real test). In the 6 free questions, you actually have to write code.
The CS test, as well as the curriculum generally centers around a Case Study package that AP has come up with. In a few words, it is a load of crap.
I believe all of this stuff i availible for free off the college board web site, here: http://www.collegeboard.com/ap/stude...sci/index.html . Take a look.
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 06:35 PM
#13
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
they mention a marine biology program...I remember kids doing it a few years back...I don't get it? What are they trying to do with 'case studies'???
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Sep 18th, 2002, 06:37 PM
#14
Frenzied Member
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Sep 18th, 2002, 08:47 PM
#15
Hyperactive Member
Originally posted by Zaei
Supposedly, the ap classes are easier to understand. Not that anyone ever teaches what is inside of them. Regardless, its idiotic.
Z.
What are ap classes? I never heard of apstring and apvector, except they are mentioned by Zaei here.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:05 PM
#16
Frenzied Member
They are exactly what they say. apvector is a vector class written by the AP people, apstring is a string... check the link above for more (bad) info.
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:27 PM
#17
Hyperactive Member
From what I feel about what you say, I think it is not a bad thing as it lets the students learn how the STL works by introducing a less sophisticated version.
STL maybe is easy to use(eg << operator) but to get a gist of how it is possible, is not especially to an inquisitive C newbie, like me then, who likes to know how everything works, would not like being told that I will know how STL works, much later(templates).
I finally knows how a << operator is overloaded and works.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:29 PM
#18
Hyperactive Member
Don't tell me the students don't get to write their own ap classes.
Then that's bad. STL all the way.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:34 PM
#19
Hyperactive Member
Just found out ap classes are not templatized classes.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:38 PM
#20
Frenzied Member
See?
While I have to agree that you MUST teach the theory, you can only teach so much theory before your students go nuts. You need to let them code as well, if the course is a programming course. If all you learn is theory, you have no way to apply that theory. I have seen students, that, when assigned to write a queue program, will actually write the program in C, instead of taking advantage of the reusablility of template classes, because they just dont understand the benefits of classes.
Might I add that the highest score on the AP CS Test is ~70%.
Z.
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Sep 18th, 2002, 09:39 PM
#21
Frenzied Member
They are template classes. The string is NOT, but the other are (if they werent... good god).
Z.
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