On 11/19/2014 6:41 AM, Paul Gilmartin wrote:
On Wed, 19 Nov 2014 07:53:56 -0500, John Gilmore wrote:
C and its sequelæ are and now seem likely to remain toys. They have
achieved all of the portability of assembly language without its
expressive power.
An amusing aphorism, about 1/3 true.
The preponderance of expressive power of HLASM rests in its
preprocessor, but that shouldn't be discounted.
"[P]ortability"? Be serious. I can compile and execute"
#include <stdio.h>
int main( void ) { printf("Hello, world!\n"); }
... on z, x86, ARM, Sparc, undoubtedly others I haven't access
to test. Please exhibit a HLASM program of comparable complexity
and portability. I don't believe even:
START
END
... will compile on most of those architectures (barring Hercules
or z390 which I shall call "toys").
Entire operating systems which support great enterprises are
implemented in C on those platforms and others. How many
in HLASM? There are candidates to supersede C. I don't
count HLASM among them. PL/I might be more likely, but
a very long shot.
Paul: it was humor / sarcasm. [At least that's how I read it.]
-Steve Comstock
-- gil
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