Sujet : Re: BASIC turns 60
De : justisaur (at) *nospam* yahoo.com (Justisaur)
Groupes : comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.actionDate : 02. May 2024, 15:13:51
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v1072v$3srmf$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 5/1/2024 2:16 PM, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
I'd wager that even if you don't know anything else about it, most
people have at least heard of the BASIC programming language. Designed
as an easy-to-use language, its comparatively lightweight footprint
paired well with the newest microcomputers of the 70s and 80s. It was
the de facto standard language for many PCs - in fact, for the longest
time, even IBM PC/Compatibles would try to boot to a BASIC interpreter
if no boot-sector was found on floppy or hard-drive, burning the
nonsensical "No ROM BASIC System Halted" message into many a PC-users
brain if there was a disk failure).
In some ways BASIC was the Java of its time; a common language that
(more or less) ran on many different computers regardless of
hardware.* Many classic games were coded in BASIC, and -even as the
world slowly moved away from that language - many developer's first
steps (and games!) were made using BASIC. Microsoft's first product
was a BASIC interpreter; without it, they'd never have had the cash to
'create' their DOS operating system and we might still all be under
the thumb of IBM (and probably still using 16-bit processors. IBM
hated innovation). I myself have semi-fond memories of typing in BASIC
programs from some magazine into my 8-bit PC, and then struggling to
understand what the hell I was doing.
Anyway, BASIC turned 60 today, with the first BASIC program being run
1 May 1964 in Dartmouth College. So let's all raise a glass to this
pioneer of computing that helped make the microcomputer industry the
success it is today.
* not quite, since BASIC interpretations varied from platform to
platform, but - especially in the early days - it didn't take too much
effort to port programs between different systems
I took a BASIC class in Jr. College in the 80's, I made a few programs. The one I remember most was one that would roll D&D characters on 3d6 in order until you qualified for the class you wanted to play (1e/2e) which was over 1000 rolls for the one Paladin.
I'm still slowly trying to learn Javascript, but it makes absolutely no sense to me in comparison. I can type a simple program in and try to figure out why it isn't working, but that's about it, which is discouraging.
I had tried to learn Python many years ago on my own, but just didn't have the motivation, I remember it making a lot more sense though. Maybe I should go back to that, but I wanted the web native abilities of Javascript.
-- -Justisaur ø-ø(\_/)\ `-'\ `--.___, ¶¬'\( ,_.-'
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