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- Newsgroups: comp.lang.modula2
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!metro!seagoon.newcastle.edu.au!wombat.newcastle.edu.au!eepjm
- From: eepjm@wombat.newcastle.edu.au (Peter Moylan)
- Subject: Re: Is Modula-2 dead?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep8.101657.1@wombat.newcastle.edu.au>
- Lines: 35
- Sender: news@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au
- Organization: University of Newcastle, AUSTRALIA
- References: <1992Aug20.134358.25702@informatik.uni-bremen.de> <714374380snx@black.demon.co.uk> <36848@uflorida.cis.ufl.edu> <1992Aug28.125029.26916@texhrc.uucp>
- Date: Tue, 8 Sep 1992 00:16:57 GMT
-
- In article <36848@uflorida.cis.ufl.edu>, bmr@retiree.cis.ufl.edu (Benedict Rafanello) writes:
-
- > Modula-2 isn't dead yet, and looks to be doing well in Europe. Maybe this
- > country will wake up and the "C" craze the will pass. :)
-
- In article <1992Aug28.125029.26916@texhrc.uucp>, ak45ldp@Texaco.com (Larry D. Pyeatt) writes:
-
- > Don't count on it, Ben. For some reason, most Americans have a dislike for "good"
- > programming languages. If only Wirth had been an American...
-
- It's tempting to compare this with the Fortran vs. Algol situation in the
- early 1970s. At that time Algol-60 was very popular in Europe, and
- Fortran was very popular in the U.S. Because of the strong dominance
- of the U.S.A. in the computer field, and in particular because of the
- influence of IBM, the Europeans didn't have much leverage, and Algol-60
- became very much a minority language.
-
- The new factors now are that the U.S. no longer has quite the influence
- which it used to have, that compilers are no longer big-budget items,
- and that individual computer users now have greater freedom to choose
- their languages, rather than being confined to the one or two
- languages decently supported on the central computer.
-
- One of the many reasons for the popularity of C is that C is not Ada.
- This matters a lot in the U.S., I suspect, because of the DoD pressure,
- but it is less of a factor in the rest of the world.
-
- Now, none of these factors necessarily means that Modula-2 will
- become a winner; but nor do they mean that it will become a loser.
- American preferences are no longer a dominating factor.
-
- I'd be curious to know what is popular in the countries with
- expanding economies - parts of south-east Asia, for example.
- --
- Peter Moylan eepjm@wombat.newcastle.edu.au
-