any reply is appreciate sothat people go to the right direction .
any reply is appreciate sothat people go to the right direction .
that all depends on how you look at it... but i assure you no languages will fade away into nothingness with the exception of proprietary (sp?) languages...
Join is in our Unofficial Cprog IRC channel
Server: irc.phoenixradio.org
Channel: #Tech
Team Cprog Folding@Home: Team #43476
Download it Here
Detailed Stats Here
More Detailed Stats
52 Members so far, are YOU a member?
Current team score: 1223226 (ranked 374 of 45152)
The CBoard team is doing better than 99.16% of the other teams
Top 5 Members: Xterria(518175), pianorain(118517), Bennet(64957), JaWiB(55610), alphaoide(44374)
Last Updated on: Wed, 30 Aug, 2006 @ 2:30 PM EDT
Well, no one codes in BASIC anymore, Cobol is usually only used on legacy systems (usually no on writes new apps in it). The same goes for Fortran. ADA was never very popular to begin with. That's about the extent of my knowledge without bs'ing it.
PHP and XML
Let's talk about SAX
When my nephew turns 6 guess what language I'll be teaching him in first? BASIC still has its usage, even if its just instructional.no one codes in BASIC anymore
Pascal is slowing dying away. More and more schools are not offering it anymore. Which is sad, I'm currently taking a class in it and have gained a lot of knowledge about programming in general.
If memory serves me, I remember reading something about a two languages before C called, A and B. Know if that is true then they are most likely dead.
Knock yerself out
http://directory.google.com/Top/Comp...ing/Languages/
If you dance barefoot on the broken glass of undefined behaviour, you've got to expect the occasional cut.
If at first you don't succeed, try writing your phone number on the exam paper.
Fortran hasn't completely faded. New apps are still written in it when speed of computations is a major factor.
The word rap as it applies to music is the result of a peculiar phonological rule which has stripped the word of its initial voiceless velar stop.
you haven't done much with robotics lately, have you?Originally posted by Waldo2k2
Well, no one codes in BASIC anymore
Join is in our Unofficial Cprog IRC channel
Server: irc.phoenixradio.org
Channel: #Tech
Team Cprog Folding@Home: Team #43476
Download it Here
Detailed Stats Here
More Detailed Stats
52 Members so far, are YOU a member?
Current team score: 1223226 (ranked 374 of 45152)
The CBoard team is doing better than 99.16% of the other teams
Top 5 Members: Xterria(518175), pianorain(118517), Bennet(64957), JaWiB(55610), alphaoide(44374)
Last Updated on: Wed, 30 Aug, 2006 @ 2:30 PM EDT
>>you haven't done much with robotics lately, have you?
depends on what controller board you use, the only one's ive used are either embedded C or Java (i've only worked with the C). I haven't seen boards programmed in BASIC.
And I wan't referring to it as an instructional thing, I was talking more professionally. You guys seriously take things out of context too much. Same with the thing about Fortran, I never said it completely faded.
PHP and XML
Let's talk about SAX
no one codes in BASIC anymoreAnd I wan't referring to it as an instructional thing, I was talking more professionally."No one" is pretty hard to take out of context. We might take things out of the context of what you meant but I wouldn't say we took it out of the context of what you said.You guys seriously take things out of context
I thought B was short for BASIC? I don't know about A though...If memory serves me, I remember reading something about a two languages before C called, A and B. Know if that is true then they are most likely dead.
"Think not but that I know these things; or think
I know them not: not therefore am I short
Of knowing what I ought."
-John Milton, Paradise Regained (1671)
"Work hard and it might happen."
-XSquared
Assembly, Basic, C... no no, that doesn't sound right.Originally posted by Thantos If memory serves me, I remember reading something about a two languages before C called, A and B. Know if that is true then they are most likely dead.
Wasn't the original language BCPC? The 'C' language was named after the second letter (as the second language). I'm sure *I* could be wrong, but I remember reading this in one of my C books.
BCPL, rather.
I dont think B and BASIC are the same though.
EDIT:
some info on B:
http://foldoc.doc.ic.ac.uk/foldoc/foldoc.cgi?B
Last edited by laserlight; 11-24-2003 at 12:14 AM.
I might be wrong on the A language part though. This was ~10 years ago that I read it.