From: "Campbell, Rolf [SKY:1U32:EXCH]" Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: How do I compile Pascal and Fortran programs? Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2000 13:02:40 -0500 Organization: Nortel Networks Lines: 29 Message-ID: <38DBADC0.9548F792@americasm01.nt.com> References: <8b8kig$ihq$1 AT bob DOT news DOT rcn DOT net> <8b8o0f$596$1 AT news1 DOT sunrise DOT ch> <38D7EA3F DOT DA0391CF AT geocities DOT com> <245gds4qtdct89romp8pv462loo2iitlq4 AT 4ax DOT com> <8ba32g$co3$1 AT antares DOT lu DOT erisoft DOT se> <8bas1d$gla$1 AT news1 DOT sunrise DOT ch> <38D907B4 DOT DB05EB0 AT americasm01 DOT nt DOT com> <8bcovv$em2$1 AT antares DOT lu DOT erisoft DOT se> NNTP-Posting-Host: wmerh0tk.ca.nortel.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.72C-CCK-MCD [en] (X11; I; HP-UX B.10.20 9000/785) X-Accept-Language: en To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Reply-To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com Martin Stromberg wrote: > Campbell, Rolf [SKY:1U32:EXCH] (moscoop AT americasm01 DOT nt DOT com) wrote: > : Osah wrote: > > : > > Your chronology is a little mixed up. C was created as the same time > : > > as UNIX, i. e. around the beginning of the seventies. I'm quite sure > : > > this was before Pascal. > : > I thought C was created from a language called 'B' (so i was informed) and > : > then later on UNIX was rewritten entirely in C language. > : I think it was a mixture of Ada and some language that starts with 'B'. > > Again the chronology seems to be severly mixed up. I really don't > think Ada was near it's inception at that time. However the person Ada > was well before this. > > Let me quote Harbison and Steele, C, a Reference Manual: > "Dennis Ritchie designed the C language at Bell Laboratories in about > 1972, and its ancestry dates from ALGOL 60 (1960), through Cambridge's > CPL (1963), Martin Richards's BCPL (1967) and Ken Thompson's B > language (1970) at Bell Labs." Ooops, I meant Algol, not Ada... -- (\/) Rolf Campbell (\/)