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Full Discussion: Is C worth the effort?
Top Forums Programming Is C worth the effort? Post 302905431 by dryPants on Wednesday 11th of June 2014 12:58:30 PM
Old 06-11-2014
At First thanks for your Help Smilie
So you say learning c First makes more sence, because C++ hides some nasty stuff. That makes sence Smilie
How much Assembler should i learn? And which? X86 or AMD64?
And yes Linux Kernel is also a nice topic i would like to explore in the future.
So learning c should be worth the effort.

Do you have some other good advices for me?
 

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scratch(1)						      General Commands Manual							scratch(1)

NAME
Scratch - An easy to use interactive programming environment for ages 8 and up. Description Scratch is an easy, interactive, collaborative programming environment designed for creation of interactive stories, animations, games, music, and art -- and sharing these on the web. Scratch is designed to help young people (ages 8 and up) develop 21st century learning skills. As they create Scratch projects, young people learn important mathematical and computational ideas, while also gaining a deeper understanding of the process of design. This man page contains basic information about Scratch. For additional information, see the Scratch website at http://scratch.mit.edu. OPTIONS
Options are set through the .scratch.ini file in the user's home directory. For instructions on how to edit this file, see http://info.scratch.mit.edu/Network_Installation. BUGS
Please report bugs to the package maintainer. For the most recent version of this package, see http://info.scratch.mit.edu/Linux_installer FILES
/usr/bin/scratch - scratch startup script /usr/lib/scratch/ - Contains Scratch.image (Squeak image containing Scratch code), and scratch.ini file /usr/share/scratch/- Contains subdirectories with Scratch media library, sample projects, and language files. COPYRIGHT
Scratch is Copyright (C) 2011 Massachusetts Institute of Technology and released under the GPL v2. See the LICENSE file included with the source code. The Scratch logo, the Scratch cat, and Gobo are trademarks of MIT and may not be used in substantially modified programs based on the Scratch source code. Scratch is developed by the Lifelong Kindergarten group at the MIT Media Lab. See http://scratch.mit.edu scratch(1)
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