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   comp.lang.forth      Forth programmers eat a lot of Bratwurst      117,927 messages   

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   Message 117,809 of 117,927   
   Kerr-Mudd, John to Bobbie Sellers   
   Re: polyglot programming, Recent history   
   07 Dec 25 10:52:56   
   
   XPost: comp.os.linux.misc, alt.folklore.computers   
   From: admin@127.0.0.1   
      
   On Sat, 6 Dec 2025 22:50:50 -0800   
   Bobbie Sellers  wrote:   
      
   >   
   >   
   > On 12/6/25 22:19, Charlie Gibbs wrote:   
   > > On 2025-12-07, rbowman  wrote:   
   > >   
   > >> On Sat, 6 Dec 2025 22:28:21 -0000 (UTC), John Levine wrote:   
   > >>   
   > >>> According to Peter Flass  :   
   > >>>   
   > >>>>> I've seen C written in languages other than English. To clarify, the C   
   > >>>>> key words are the same, if, else, int, #include, and so forth but   
   > >>>>> variable and function names, comments and everything else are in   
   > >>>>> Spanish, German, and so forth. It's difficult to read.   
   > >>>>   
   > >>>> I've seen the same with PL/I. I understand there was once an ALGOL   
   > >>>> compiler where they used French keywords. Debut-Fin, etc.   
   > >>>   
   > >>> Algol60 had a reference language which had boldface keywords, and every   
   > >>> implmentation made its own decision about how to translate that into the   
   > >>> local character set.  (Yes, this made portable programming a lot   
   > >>> harder.)  So while it was typical to turn the begin keyword into   
   > >>> something like 'BEGIN' it was just as valid to turn it into 'DEBUT'.   
   > >>   
   > >> you could have real fun with Forth.   
   > >   
   > > I did.  I still have a copy of Leo Brodie's _Starting Forth_.   
   > > I got it running on my CP/M box and fiddled with it for a while.   
   > > I never got any real-world application going, but I did manage   
   > > to write a Sieve of Eratosthenes.   
   > >   
   > > Forth love if honk then   
   > >   
   >   
   > 		On the Amiga I used a shareware text processor called Textra.   
   > 	Forth written it it was and very handy for editing Startup Scripts.   
   > 	It did tricks I have not seen in Linux text processors and did them   
   > 	somewhat more reliably than bookmarks in KWrite or Kate. Both   
   > 	are excellent but aimed toward programmers more than simple   
   > 	ASCII. I believe we had a menu-based "insert file" and know   
   > 	we could select vertical columns of text and that was using the   
   > 	mouse.   
   > 	   
   >       bliss-Dell Precision 7730-PCLOS 2025.10-Linux 6.12.60-pclos1- KDE   
   > Plasma 6.5.3   
   > 	   
      
   xposted to clf, for more possible nostalgia.   
      
   --   
   Bah, and indeed Humbug.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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