I agree with Jon.  A lot of NYCJUG's "Beginner's Regatta" modules are
geared toward very basic things like reading file and turning it into a
useful array.

On Wed, Jul 8, 2015 at 1:56 AM, Jon Hough <[email protected]> wrote:

> I am interested in contributing, but am unsure what, if anything, I can
> contribute. I'd rather wait to see what others contribute to see what kind
> of things you are expecting.
> Regarding your points
> "The main thing is to choose an interesting topic. We want the user to see
> the topic as worthwhile, to think about how they would do it in their
> favorite language, and then to see the elegance of the J solution. The
> harder the code is, the farther back it will go into the Lab."
> In my opinion, keeping examples as concrete as possible is best. e.g.
> interfacing with MySQL, a HTTP client, manipulating csv and excel files.
> i.e. things that people are likely to want to use in the real world. Things
> like "calculating the square of the sum of the first 100 mersenne primes "
> or what not, might put people off and and make J seem only suitable for
> idle mathematical playing. Just a thought.
>
> > Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2015 21:40:39 +0000
> > From: [email protected]
> > To: [email protected]; [email protected]
> > Subject: [Jprogramming] New visual teaching lab for J - contributors
> needed
> >
> > Up till now, to learn J you had to be willing to read a lot of words.
> Many modern programmers aren't into that.
> >
> > With J8.04, there's a new way - a VISUAL way - to learn J.  It uses the
> J IDE, plus debug, dissect, and the user's browser to give an interactive
> environment for exploring J.  You can read about this lab at
> >
> > http://www.jsoftware.com/jwiki/JbyPointAndClick
> >
> > (note that you have to update your J8.04 to the level as of right now)
> >
> > As it stands the lab is just a beginning.  Load it & see if you like the
> idea.  If you do, please contribute a chapter or two.  I think about 50
> more chapters might do the trick.
> >
> > The lab needs material at all levels.  Write about a program you find
> interesting and your chapter can be inserted into the lab at an appropriate
> place.
> >
> > My hope is that this lab will grow to the point that it can keep a
> scalar programmer's interest long enough for them to see that J is a
> language fit for daily use.  Then we can start an outreach program to
> influential codebloggers to get our language the recognition and respect it
> deserves.
> >
> > Henry Rich
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> > For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
>



-- 
Devon McCormick, CFA
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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