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No computer software is designed even to fly a one-winged plane. However by coincident it had at least one success in that F-15 case. There must had been lots of luck and fortunate conditions, e.g. have the right elevation, distance to airfield, speed, weather / wind etc. Basically if you lost a wing you lost lift & balance. Tail will still kept you going forward, you can glide in a very rough way, with computer compensating the strong tendency to roll like no body's business. It would be very uncontrollable to fly or even sustain. So only when it happened in very favourable conditions of height distance speed etc to the airfield that chance can come by.
Pilots are very afraid of flight computer software lots of time. They had made lots of complain about them. They had blamed lots of incidents / accidents on flight computer software. Pilots' control these days are only inputs to the computer and computer is in control of plane instead of pilots. Lots of time the computers are not doing what the pilots wanted or expected or needed.
Only in old small planes the pilots actually controlled the real flight control surfaces (rudder elevator aileron) with cables and mechanical linkage.
e.g. this guy:
Pilots are very afraid of flight computer software lots of time. They had made lots of complain about them. They had blamed lots of incidents / accidents on flight computer software. Pilots' control these days are only inputs to the computer and computer is in control of plane instead of pilots. Lots of time the computers are not doing what the pilots wanted or expected or needed.
Only in old small planes the pilots actually controlled the real flight control surfaces (rudder elevator aileron) with cables and mechanical linkage.
e.g. this guy:

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