OK, here mine pre-university: Z-80 machine code (self designed/soldered computer [Screen: 32x8 characters each 6 bit - save chips save money]; the assembler was me, manually) Basic (Comodore C16) FORTH (written be myself with the build in 5026[or something] assembler of the C16) A real assembler for the C16, which I used to write a different FORTH Pascal
university: Modula-2 VMS assembler C C++ Prolog traces of Lisp Unix/Linux traces of Perl post graduate: SGML Scheme slim traces of ML VHDL Verilog LaTeX, Lout DSSSL XSLT some Python > At work I'm writing a lot of Java and XSLT (factlet of the day: you > can write entire web applications in XSLT; You can www.dla-compro.de is no plone. It's Scheme+XSLT+CSS+JavaScript. (On top of askemos.org - a p2p network). > no, I wouldn't recommend doing it :-) I would. But don't ask me. Ask the develpers how long it took them. (They knew both before had a choice: write essential modelling code for askemos but use it as data base only and utilize something like plone as middle tier between the data base and the browser. They choose the alternative: drop plone and python; do it native.) /Jörg _______________________________________________ Chicken-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/chicken-users
