Learner Reviews & Feedback for Programming Languages, Part C by University of Washington
About the Course
Top reviews
HB
Feb 7, 2018
A course with a lot of work, but great reward. Dan who holds the course is passionate and knows what he talks about, making it a pleasure to listen to.
FL
Apr 17, 2018
After watching this course, now I truly understand Objects Oriented programming, and its relation with Functional Programming. Strongly recommend!
76 - 99 of 99 Reviews for Programming Languages, Part C
By Yaqiu L
•Oct 22, 2016
This Course if difficult but is very valuable.
By Ahmad H
•Jan 25, 2023
Best programming languages course out there.
By Hector L
•Aug 13, 2017
concise comparison between FP and OOP
By dynasty919
•Mar 3, 2018
that last assignment is pretty neat.
By daniel 1
•May 20, 2018
very good programming language in c
By Zack W
•Aug 26, 2019
definitely a rewarding course
By Wang Y
•Aug 1, 2017
The best course on coursera!
By Aydin S
•Dec 17, 2020
Fantastic end to the series
By Gerhard K
•Jan 12, 2017
Absolutely Brilliant Course
By Guilherme B
•Oct 23, 2016
Best course of my life!
By Atsushi
•Jan 30, 2019
great course material
By pffy233
•Nov 20, 2016
excellence experience
By Kevin X
•Dec 19, 2016
Really impressive!
By 郑
•Jan 10, 2018
very good course!
By Hussein K
•Nov 15, 2022
Great Adventure.
By Sam R
•Jan 11, 2019
Fantastic course
By Morton L
•Apr 4, 2020
Great course.
By Alejandro M
•Dec 17, 2016
Excellent!
By Xinzhuang X
•Nov 13, 2022
fruitful
By jani k
•Mar 28, 2018
exellent
By Abdifatah A
•Dec 19, 2017
great!!
By Melwyn S
•Aug 5, 2023
Fab!!!
By UmbraSeven
•Sep 28, 2017
Great!
By Brandon I
•Mar 7, 2020
Again, great course - I was a little bit shaky on the Ruby, but to be honest this was my first real dive into what OOP is "really like" (as far as I can tell). I was also impressed by how certain important concepts from Part B were also tested towards the end (e.g., streams). I also enjoyed the material on subtyping towards the end; it makes you actually want to be interested in implementing a small language like that someday. The only caveat I must mention (and what the missing star is due to) is that, I had a little trouble on my Linux machine getting a version of Tcl/Tk to work with my installation of Ruby, since Ruby doesn't accept the latest (packaged) version of Tcl/Tk. I also had trouble with Jruby, and in the end opted to manually install older versions of Tcl and Tk. But I think the Tetris experience was worth it :) That whole little sidetrack actually also turned me on to the possibility of how PLs use graphics libraries in general, so let's see where that leads...