Tim Schattkowsky wrote to All <=-
Hello All,
Ping!
Tim Schattkowsky wrote to All <=-
Hello All,
Ping!
Pong!
Not too much going on here ;)
Wilfred van Velzen wrote to Tim Schattkowsky <=-
Who, in their right mind, is still using Pascal, if they can avoid it? ;-)
In Fidonet there are a few legacy programs that were written in Pascal. But of those I don't think there are many that are actively maintained.
Someone correct me, but doesn't Mystic BBS still allow you to program things in Pascal? Or did they finally move to Python?
Who, in their right mind, is still using Pascal, if they can avoid
it? ;-)
Those of who are playing with vintage CP/M and MS-DOS machines. Turbo Pascal
was probably the best tool for programming on those systems.
In Fidonet there are a few legacy programs that were written in
Pascal. But of those I don't think there are many that are actively
maintained.
Someone correct me, but doesn't Mystic BBS still allow you to program things
in Pascal?
Or did they finally move to Python?
But the ghosts of these old languages still exist in the modern ones. Pascal
wouldn't have existed without Algol. Java borrows heavily from Pascal.
And how many languages have riffed off Java?
Hello All,
Ping!
Who, in their right mind, is still using Pascal, if they can avoid it? ;-)
Those of who are playing with vintage CP/M and MS-DOS machines. Turbo Pascal was probably the best tool for programming on those systems.
In Fidonet there are a few legacy programs that were written in
Pascal. But of those I don't think there are many that are
actively maintained.
Hi Tim,
On 2024-04-09 10:46:21, you wrote to Dan Clough:
Not too much going on here ;)
Who, in their right mind, is still using Pascal, if they can avoid it? ;-)
In Fidonet there are a few legacy programs that were written in Pascal. But of those I don't think there are many that are actively maintained.
Unless it's now Free Pascal?
WinPoint is written in Delphi, which should count. But yes, its pretty legacy.
Still, I think delphi is still good today for multi-platform development. However, I would not do it because frankly said the customers advisors my tell
them that anybody using Delphi today is incompetent.
Who, in their right mind, is still using Pascal, if they can avoid it? ;-)
Who, in their right mind, is still using Pascal, if they can avoid
it? ;-)
I am. That's how I STILL program Renegade BBS in.
Someone correct me, but doesn't Mystic BBS still allow you to program things in Pascal? Or did they finally move to Python?
Delphi / C++ Builder is still in active development by Embarcadero, and has a modern ide. We use C++ Builder at work.
Someone correct me, but doesn't Mystic BBS still allow you to program things
in Pascal?
I highly doubt Mystic has a Pascal compiler build into it. So it probably has
support for executables. So it doesn't matter what language they are written in.
Unless it's now Free Pascal?
Is that production ready?
Delphi / C++ Builder is still in active development by Embarcadero, and
has a modern ide. We use C++ Builder at work.
Technically it's Idera (that purchased Embarcadero back 2015) that "develops"
C++ Builder. I still use C++ Builder 6 to build Synchronet for Win32 GUI apps
and have tried (unsuccessfully) to migrate those projects (one big
one) to modern versions of C++ Builder. I'll be looking at some other cross-platform tools for future Synchronet GUI app work. -- digital
man (rob)
Someone correct me, but doesn't Mystic BBS still allow you to
program things in Pascal?
I highly doubt Mystic has a Pascal compiler build into it. So it
probably has support for executables. So it doesn't matter what language
they are written in.
For the record, Mystic uses MPL (Mystic Programming Language) which is heavily
based on, if not identical to Free Pascal, iirc. There is indeed a compiler
included with the BBS software, called 'mplc' (Mystic Programming Language Compiler, I would assume).
So yes, you can write and compile your own stuff. ;)
Unless it's now Free Pascal?
Is that production ready?
Wilfred van Velzen wrote to Dr. What <=-
Hi Dr.,
(Your real name is broken!)
That's an opinion! ;)
I liked Turbo C ...
I highly doubt Mystic has a Pascal compiler build into it. So it
probably has support for executables. So it doesn't matter what
language they are written in.
I have Python seen being mentioned in the Mystic area...
And how many languages have riffed off Java?
I think you are confused with C !
Unless it's now Free Pascal?
Is that production ready?
I don't know.
(Your real name is broken!)
No. My real name is fine. The sysop of this BBS has his echos configured incorrectly.
That's an opinion! ;)
I liked Turbo C ...
Yup. That's an opinion. But good luck finding a good C compiler for CP/M 2.2.
Needless to say, Turbo Pascal was wonderful in those days. Turbo C
didn't come out until MUCH later.
I highly doubt Mystic has a Pascal compiler build into it. So it
probably has support for executables. So it doesn't matter what
language they are written in.
No, that's not correct. I don't know if it has a compiler "built in", but I
know that you wrote your code and use some sort of "compiler" to build it. It's been a while.
Code::blocks is free to use. I use it for FMail development. It uses mingw on Windows, but you can configure other compilers.
CLion is a much better/advanced ide, it's payware, but you can get a free license if you are a developer for an active opensource project, which shouldn't be a problem for you! ;-)
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