Hello old timers,
With much referencing legacy languages and manuals, I had to check out how long to get a working compiler to test out on a current Linux
installation. It sounded like a challenge:
<gnat installed>
kc4zvw@www:~$ gnat --version
GNAT 10.5.0
Copyright (C) 1996-2020, Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.
There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
kc4zvw@www:~$
https://area51specialprojects.dev/ada_gnat.html { proof of output }
regards,
David
--
David - KC4ZVW
Chuluota, FL
https://www.kc4zvw.org/
> Sent: Saturday, August 10, 2024 at 2:12 PM
> From: karl@???
> To: dng@???
> Subject: Re: [DNG] Why C/C++ ?
> Didier Kryn:
>> First Ada is not that ancient: it is newer than C (~: . Algol-60 was
>> the ancestor of Algol-68 which was the ancestor of Pascal, which was the
>> ancestor of Ada around the 80's. I saw a first manual in 1987, but there
>> was still no compiler at that time.
> ...
> My ref.manual is printed in Sweden in 1983. I attended a course in Ada
> where we programmed in Ada and run the programs, it was mid-80's.
> There was a guy (the course teacher) there at the university at Uppsala
> who was into Ada. It might been an interpreter we used but I guess not,
> don't remember the details.
> Regards,
> /Karl Hammar