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I am completely flabbergasted that they use a visual coding language. Many people tried the concept, and it never had any success (I remember how much criticism received Google (now MIT) App Inventor) - and now, we have a prime example, moreover in actual use, moreover in critical applications.
Visual programming languages/methods are actually used _a lot_ in critical applications.
For example :
http://www.esterel-technologies.com/products/scade-suite/
Maybe DRAKON was kind of like LabView : everyone hates it, but it takes quite a bit of effort not to use it anyway since it essentially has support for everything a computer can interface with. Or maybe them crazy Soviets actually found a way to make visual programming an attractive way to write and debug programs...
Edited 2012-06-05 21:24 UTC
As pointed out by Treza, visual programming languages are actually quite common in many specialized areas. An excellent case in point is The Mathworks' Simulink, which is used extensively in engineering applications.
Come to think of it, I'm sure I saw Simulink in use when I interned at a hedge fund many moons ago as a rudimentary market dynamics simulator for stock index futures.





Member since:
2007-07-01
Thanks for the link. I read the whole pdf.
DRAKON has the kind of Soviet technological aesthetics I like. Simplest possible thing that robustly doest what you need.