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The Queen's English and Fortran iv.
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You're supposed to reply on the main thread
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Threads don't obey your rules, man.
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Then get ready to get ignored.
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I believe I just was.
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No you weren't. The Queen's English and Fortran IV for me too.
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U.S. English and HTML
These days I use a lot more VB.NET. (And, yes, I still speak English)
BTW: I would have upvoted you but the button won't show up when my mouse is actually present.
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English and TRS-80 BASIC
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Dutch, and z80 assembly.
Still use Dutch, don't really use z80 assembly much, except when I'm feeling nostalgic. I'm too spoiled by other architectures that can add any pair of registers and can shift by more than 1 bit at the time (yes I know about RLD but it sucks) and have multiplication and division instructions.
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Assembly as your first programming language? That's pretty hardcore
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English and Hindi in equal measure.
LEO III assembler and Intercode (some years later).
Use the best guess
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Hindi?
You must have been born in India or in Bradford!
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American, and Commodore BASIC.
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AFAIK American isn't a language.
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I learned German (my mother was German) and English pretty much at the same time as a tyke. My first computer program was written in IBM 1620 assembly language.
Now I speak mostly English and Spanish (my wife is Bolivian) and haven't seen an IBM 1620 in a long, long time!
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E.
Comport Computing
Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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Tamil and Fortran II on an IBM 1620!
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Walt Fair, Jr. wrote: IBM 1620 assembly language
Its real name was "SPS", later "SPS-II" and "SPS-IID". Long form of the name was "Symbolic Programming System".
... and a 4900796 to you too.
--
Harvey
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Amurikan English and FORTRAN .
Software Zen: delete this;
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English & HTML
thatrajaNobody remains a virgin, Life screws everyone
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thatraja wrote: English & HTML
HTML isn't a language. It's an abomination.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: HTML isn't a language.
"HTML" is an acronym. The "L" in "HTML" stands for "Language", as in "HyperText Markup Language"...
--
Harvey
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H.Brydon wrote: The "L" in "HTML" stands for "Language", as in "HyperText Markup Language" As opposed to "HTPL" for "HyperText Programming Language", presumably.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Agreed, HTML is not a programming language. It is a markup language, used in the wonderful world of computers to display something using in a particular way with markup codes.
Welcome to the discussion.
--
Harvey
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Geordie<super>* and I dont't know: either LOGO or Sinclair BASIC
*If the lowland Scots are claiming that as separate from English, then I am claiming this, it is about as different.
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