On Fri, 18 Mar 2005, Justin Clift wrote:

> Lars D. Nood�n wrote:
> > I would agree with Claus' suggestions and prefer the definition "a 
> > widespread platform independent language"  Widespread is just too hard a 
> > metric to define, though I think Perl is still probably most common and 
> > wide spread, and distracts from the main point which is less controversial.
> 
> Hmmm... how about "a widespread language aiming for platform 
> independence"?  Java's definitely not platform independent (ie. try 
> running it on *BSD... big problems).

English is not my mother tongue but as I understand it then independent 
means you are not depended on one platform like Sun Solaris but can use 
other platforms - not all platforms. 

The most enjoyable greetings
-- 
Claus Agerskov                    "Kan jeg, s� kan du ogs�"
Helper/Hj�lper            Henrik Dahl i DRs Rabatten om OpenOffice.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]         --------------------------------------------
http://ooo.chbs.dk/               http://da.openoffice.org/


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