Re: The joy of FORTRAN

Liste des GroupesRevenir à col misc 
Sujet : Re: The joy of FORTRAN
De : Danny (at) *nospam* hyperspace.vogon.gov (R Daneel Olivaw)
Groupes : alt.folklore.computers comp.os.linux.misc
Date : 27. Sep 2024, 18:58:37
Autres entêtes
Organisation : To protect and to server
Message-ID : <vd6rod$3l9p4$1@paganini.bofh.team>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101 SeaMonkey/2.53.18.2
Charlie Gibbs wrote:
On 2024-09-27, Peter Flass <peter_flass@yahoo.com> wrote:
 
Bob Eager <news0009@eager.cx> wrote:
 
On Wed, 25 Sep 2024 07:06:36 +0000, rbowman wrote:
>
On 25 Sep 2024 06:52:08 GMT, Bob Eager wrote:
>
On Tue, 24 Sep 2024 23:45:51 +0000, rbowman wrote:
>
On Tue, 24 Sep 2024 21:14:04 -0000 (UTC), Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>
PL/I was IBM’s attempt at a Grand Unification of both “business” and
“scientific” programming in one language. If you thought C++
programming was full of surprises when your program did unexpected
things, PL/I invented the whole genre of “surprise-ridden programming
language”
>
IBM was always so modest. Programming Language One. A Programming
Language.
>
A colleague of mine wrote a powerful macro processor (which I still use
and maintain). He called it Macro Language One - ML/I. He loved taking
the piss out of IBM.
>
Gary Kildall may have been doing that with PL/M, Programming Language
for Microprocessors. It did have some PL/I DNA.
>
There are also PL-516, PL-11, ...
>
PL.8
 And on the operating system side, I know of
OS/2, OS/3, OS/4, OS/7, and OS/9.
 
OS1100 bzw. OS2200.

Date Sujet#  Auteur
2 Jul 25 o 

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal