Liste des Groupes | Revenir à cl c |
"David Brown" <david.brown@hesbynett.no> wrote in messagedirectory.h, damn you! Folders are for schoolteachers, not programmers. We could fall out over this.
news:100hs85$27qbn$1@dont-email.me...On 20/05/2025 11:36, Paul Edwards wrote:"Keith Thompson" <Keith.S.Thompson+u@gmail.com> wrote in message>
news:87ecwj1vy9.fsf@nosuchdomain.example.com..."Paul Edwards" <mutazilah@gmail.com> writes:And C90 (etc) could potentially be extended to include a folder.h
So do I. So far, so good.Yes, I agree with that.>>>
C90 will never be extended. It was made obsolete by C99, which was made obsolete by C11, which was made
obsolete by C23. You're free to invent your own language
based on C90 if you like, but C went in a different direction decades ago.
That depends on your definition of "C". Ritchie is no longer here to
adjudicate whether something close to C90 - in the spirit of the
original C, is the true successor to his language, and which one is
a complete and utter joke of no relation to anything he designed.
>
Once C was standardised - first by ANSI, then immediately afterwards by
ISO - the "definition of C" became clear.
Whether you agree with David or not, he's correct. He has accurately described the way the world sees C.The language is covered by anI don't agree with this. I'm sure the ISO committee is keen
international standard, so "C" is the language defined by that standard.
Thus "C" means "C23" at the moment - each newly published C standard
"cancels and replaces" the previous version.
to "cancel" the previous work.
But I have a different opinion.It would seem not. Pull up a chair.
I doubt that I am alone.
I'm probably in a minority, but so what?You're in /my/ minority, but that's okay; there's plenty of room.
Ritchie single-handedly fought off noalias. Deranged my foot! All his marbles present and correct, and every marble a winner.Ritchie's opinion hasn'tWell, in the 1990s I had some work colleagues who were
had any connection to the "definition of C" since 1989. I don't know if
he ever expressed a public opinion on C99, or the plans for C11. I
would, however, be astounded if he had considered it "a complete and
utter joke of no relation to anything he designed".
incensed that I had converted some K&R C code to C90,
and called it "nancy C". I pointed out that Ritchie himself
had endorsed the standard, and they still didn't budge,
saying that he had become deranged or something like that.
From another corner I still deal with people who insistComputer scientists hunt elephants by exercising Algorithm
that everything should be written in assembler.
And in another corner, there are people who claim that IMibs are marbles. You can't run a C compiler under 16 marbles, not even if you bring in Dennis Ritchie.
am at fault for not making "my" compiler (a slight variation
of gcc 3.2.3) run in under 16 MiB of memory.
I understand where these people are coming from.So do I, but I expect it was a typo for 16 GB.
And I can see the alternative described by that Jeff articleRight.
I referenced.
But my starting position is that I (sort of) can't personally
fault the C90 standard, and the assembler code produced
by a typical C compiler is exemplary, and that this is the
basis for the lingua franca of programming.
I'm afraid we're about 13½ years too late to expect an answer from the man himself, but I could guess at his answers:(And while I don't think that an "appeal to authority" argument has muchI'm not asking him to approve my OS ideas. I'm asking him
merit, he did say that he found Linux "quite delightful" as a
continuation of UNIX, and I would not expect him to have viewed your OS
ideas as productive.)
to explain what is wrong with the C90 that he approved of,
and whether my mentioned extensions are reasonable.
Then what do you mean by it? I suspect David thinks you mean an update to the ISO C90 document requiring all conforming C compilers to adopt your new library. And, like me, Keith and David know full well that that ain't gonna happen.But Keith is absolutely correct here. C90 is C90, and will remain thatYou seem to have a different definition of "extension to C90" to me, then.
way (baring the very unlikely possibility of minor technical corrections).
>
You can make your own libraries, and OS's, and extensions, and languages
- whatever makes you happy. (And if you enjoy what you are doing, and
it's not harming anyone, then that's all the reason you need. You don't
need approval from anyone else. Don't let me or anyone else hinder you
enjoying yourself.) However, nothing that you ever do will be an
extension to C90.
Which is also fine.If you want to publish a library, nobody is going to argue against you doing so. You can't have too many libraries. (Well, I expect you can, but it's hard.)
Regardless, I intend to compete with the ISO committee, and
not so much start from scratch, as start from C90.
My branch may not appeal to a majority, but I'm not particularly
trying to appeal to a majority. I'm interested in appealing to the
people who I work with (e.g. author of pdld). And I'm also
interested in technical guidance from the majority who likely
have more technical skills than me, regardless of whether they
agree with my approach/goals or not (spoiler: they don't).
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.