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First language

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  • R Richard Deeming

    No, I've never played tennis[^] in my life! ;P


    "These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer

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    BrainiacV
    wrote on last edited by
    #123

    No, he meant Three Dead Trolls in a Baggie[^] Gotta love Internet Help Desk[^]

    Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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    • B BrainiacV

      To use the term this redneck idiot I had to work with, American (not English). I was given a PDP-8 assembler manual, but it didn't make sense at first, so FOCAL-8 was my first computer language, followed by Basic-8, and then looped back to PALD-8 (PDP-8 assembler).

      Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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      BiggerDon
      wrote on last edited by
      #124

      hmmmm..."idiot redneck" may be yanking your chain by feeding your biases.

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      • B BrainiacV

        GStrad wrote:

        and Forth!

        Good man! FORTH is the one true language! I really miss working in it.

        Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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        GStrad
        wrote on last edited by
        #125

        It was a great language, and I still regret getting rid of my Jupiter Ace to fund the amstrad CPC 464 that replaced it....

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        • G Gregory Gadow

          American, and Commodore BASIC.

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          rlsdumont
          wrote on last edited by
          #126

          AFAIK American isn't a language.

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          • T Tim Carmichael

            Without starting a flame war or bashing session... What is the first language you learned: verbal and coding Do you still use either on a regular basis? Why or why not? Canadian English and Commodore BASIC Living in the Southern U.S., I still speak English, but, admittedly, it has been... adjusted to use local terms (Y'all, All y'all, you'n's). I still use BASIC variants (VBA mostly in Excel or third party applications), but haven't used any Commodore products since about the late '90s.

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            rlsdumont
            wrote on last edited by
            #127

            Brazilian Portuguese and PHP/HTML I still live in Brazil, so I usually speak in Portuguese, although most of my reading/writing is in English. For a long time now my main coding language is C#. Since I work with the web (who does't nowadays?), I also write lots of JavaScript and HTML.

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            • T Tim Carmichael

              Without starting a flame war or bashing session... What is the first language you learned: verbal and coding Do you still use either on a regular basis? Why or why not? Canadian English and Commodore BASIC Living in the Southern U.S., I still speak English, but, admittedly, it has been... adjusted to use local terms (Y'all, All y'all, you'n's). I still use BASIC variants (VBA mostly in Excel or third party applications), but haven't used any Commodore products since about the late '90s.

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              Earl Truss
              wrote on last edited by
              #128

              English and FORTRAN. I still speak English but I haven't used FORTRAN since about 1985.

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              • L Lost User

                You modified your post so mine became pointless.. Well, I have a Haswell and I'm an assembly expert(I guess?), so maybe I could do something there :) I'm using AVX2 in VLC (working on sound format converters), that's just regular pre-assembled assembly though.

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                Matthew Faithfull
                wrote on last edited by
                #129

                My QOR Architecture Aspect[^] article has gone live. CP editorial did a bang up job with the images in record time :cool: :java:

                "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                • G GStrad

                  It was a great language, and I still regret getting rid of my Jupiter Ace to fund the amstrad CPC 464 that replaced it....

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                  BrainiacV
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #130

                  I initially used it to wrote a Biorhythm cartridge for Bally's Astrocade, but I really got into it when I was programming computer controlled conveyor systems. We used a multi-tasker in the language instead of the operating system. We were able to query variables while the conveyor was running in real time. The 32 bit version was great because we didn't have the 64K limit. Prior to that I had to find common sequences of commands and replace them with a new verb to shrink the code to fit. I still have fantasies of an object oriented version.

                  Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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                  • B BiggerDon

                    hmmmm..."idiot redneck" may be yanking your chain by feeding your biases.

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                    BrainiacV
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #131

                    No, he was an idiot and a redneck. You haven't encountered prejudice until you have a conversation with him for any length. But don't get me started, I have hours of stories of stupid stuff this guy would spout. White Americans are the center of the universe and don't you forget it.

                    Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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                    • M Matthew Faithfull

                      My QOR Architecture Aspect[^] article has gone live. CP editorial did a bang up job with the images in record time :cool: :java:

                      "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #132

                      Scanned it a bit, will read it when I have time (should be soon) Btw, IIRC you can 5 your own article, did you try that?

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                      • L Lost User

                        Scanned it a bit, will read it when I have time (should be soon) Btw, IIRC you can 5 your own article, did you try that?

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                        Matthew Faithfull
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #133

                        Thanks, I didn't try voting on it myself, I wouldn't want to risk the wrath of Bob. :)

                        "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                        • M Matthew Faithfull

                          Thanks, I didn't try voting on it myself, I wouldn't want to risk the wrath of Bob. :)

                          "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #134

                          By the way, where can I find the code that deals with the "jump target out of range" issue?

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                          • T Tim Carmichael

                            Without starting a flame war or bashing session... What is the first language you learned: verbal and coding Do you still use either on a regular basis? Why or why not? Canadian English and Commodore BASIC Living in the Southern U.S., I still speak English, but, admittedly, it has been... adjusted to use local terms (Y'all, All y'all, you'n's). I still use BASIC variants (VBA mostly in Excel or third party applications), but haven't used any Commodore products since about the late '90s.

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                            BotReject
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #135

                            English English, mathematics (a language surely?) and Commodore BASIC. Closely followed by Latin (OK, I'm not very fluent!), assembly / machine code, BBC BASIC and C. Then I switched to the C-family and Java. I recently began programming BASIC and machine code on a C64 emulator again and I found it most illuminating - it put many concepts into an historical perspective and also brushed up my binary and taught me more about how computers work on a fundamental level.

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                            • L Lost User

                              By the way, where can I find the code that deals with the "jump target out of range" issue?

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                              Matthew Faithfull
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #136

                              If you mean when short jumps become long jumps that's handled in CEJmp::emit "ArchQOR/x86/HLAssembler/EJmp.cpp:154" in the HLA and you'd have to look after that yourself if you use the low level assembler. If we're talking jumps larger than 32bits of address space I don't know of any code dealing with that. Petr might be able to enlighten you or it may simply be missing. I have a couple of 64bit machines and 64bit OSs but I haven't as yet cooked a 64bit build with VS2012 to try out the x64 support. Given that there will be, as noted in the article, serious issues with it. It's on the TODO list but to be honest I've had my fill of assembly language for the moment and am rampaging through the AOP features for the next article. Much more my sort of thing. :)

                              "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                              • M Matthew Faithfull

                                If you mean when short jumps become long jumps that's handled in CEJmp::emit "ArchQOR/x86/HLAssembler/EJmp.cpp:154" in the HLA and you'd have to look after that yourself if you use the low level assembler. If we're talking jumps larger than 32bits of address space I don't know of any code dealing with that. Petr might be able to enlighten you or it may simply be missing. I have a couple of 64bit machines and 64bit OSs but I haven't as yet cooked a 64bit build with VS2012 to try out the x64 support. Given that there will be, as noted in the article, serious issues with it. It's on the TODO list but to be honest I've had my fill of assembly language for the moment and am rampaging through the AOP features for the next article. Much more my sort of thing. :)

                                "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                                Lost User
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #137

                                Yes that's what I meant. Was just curious how you did it. The simple way apparently, no offense :) It's not a very critical thing to get guaranteed minimum branch size, but it's an interesting problem IMO, easy to solve without code alignments (you can assume all branches are short, then make out-of-range ones large until they're all in range), I don't know yet how to do it when alignments get in the way.

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                                • L Lost User

                                  Yes that's what I meant. Was just curious how you did it. The simple way apparently, no offense :) It's not a very critical thing to get guaranteed minimum branch size, but it's an interesting problem IMO, easy to solve without code alignments (you can assume all branches are short, then make out-of-range ones large until they're all in range), I don't know yet how to do it when alignments get in the way.

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                                  Matthew Faithfull
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #138

                                  That's exactly the kind of reason I didn't write this thing from scratch. It not nearly as simple an idea as it seems and the scale at which these problems occur is always somewhere between what is 'correct' assembler, i.e. will parse and run, and what is a working program. The size of that gap seems to be bigger in assembly than any other language I've used.

                                  "The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage." Thucydides (B.C. 460-400)

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                                  • T Tim Carmichael

                                    Without starting a flame war or bashing session... What is the first language you learned: verbal and coding Do you still use either on a regular basis? Why or why not? Canadian English and Commodore BASIC Living in the Southern U.S., I still speak English, but, admittedly, it has been... adjusted to use local terms (Y'all, All y'all, you'n's). I still use BASIC variants (VBA mostly in Excel or third party applications), but haven't used any Commodore products since about the late '90s.

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                                    bobc4012
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #139

                                    US English (what is called "Standard American" and Autocoder/SPS (assembler languages) -- long before (for some of you anyway) your daddy was a gleam in his daddy's eye! LOL! :laugh:

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                                    • R RussTiller

                                      English and to show how old I am System 360 Assembler Language. I now code in C# and a little VBA when I am in Excel.

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                                      bobc4012
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #140

                                      Why you are just a "young buck" :laugh: ! See my post further on down. Autocoder/SPS. You probably used stuff I wrote for the 360! Ah, the "gud ole daze" when 80 - 100 hr weeks (with no O/T pay) were the norm! :laugh:

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                                      • K KP Lee

                                        English and no language in coding(move around wires to change the voltage transfer across capacitors and other electrical equipment and I have no memory of how it all worked. Since floating point operations wasn't a concept then, have no idea of it's speed. Since you could tell it was working by watching the voltage changes I doubt it was faster than 1 flops) yes, I still use English. First coding language COBOL, which I remember slightly better than those wires.

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                                        bobc4012
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #141

                                        You mean like those old IBM 083s, 084s, etc. and those old IBM 4xxs? Sounds like you are in my category - "older than dirt"! :laugh:

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                                        • S svella

                                          English & APL. Yes and hell no for I hope obvious reasons!!!

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                                          bobc4012
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #142

                                          APL - a man after my own heart. One of the great languages IBM never marketed! So much power in such brief statements. A debt owed to Ken Iverson (Kenneth E. Iverson).

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