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Lecture 5A | MIT 6.001 Structure and Interpretation, 1986

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Uploaded by on Apr 8, 2009

Assignment, State, and Side-effects

Despite the copyright notice on the screen, this course is now offered under a Creative Commons license: BY-NC-SA. Details at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms

Subtitles for this course are provided through the generous assistance of Henry Baker, Hoofar Pourzand, Heather Wood, Aleksejs Truhans, Steven Edwards, George Menhorn, and Mahendra Kumar.

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  • wow!!!...

  • awesome!! he totally rips through preheld concepts, utterly destroys peoples conventional models on how code works! outstanding! so funny to see the end where all the students are completely rocked by what theyjust learned, no one can think of any questions!

  • The man is adamant in his defense of the language. He's selling a philosophy that he's seems so convinced it is the very best there is. It was somewhat entertaining to see him hear him introduce the "ugly" features of FORTRAN in his beautifully otherwise syntax-less language.

    He nailed it home for me when he showed that since (demo 3) would not necessarily equal itself all the time, Scheme functions were longer mathematical functions in this new model; it almost brought a tear to my eyes.

  • EPIC!

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