Language extensibility
Michael P. Reilly
arcege at shore.net
Fri Jul 2 13:50:04 EDT 1999
More information about the Python-list mailing list
Fri Jul 2 13:50:04 EDT 1999
- Previous message (by thread): Language extensibility (was: Why is tcl broken?)
- Next message (by thread): Language extensibility
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
In comp.lang.python Jeff Dalton <jeff at todday.aiai.ed.ac.uk> wrote: : Tim Bradshaw <tfb at tfeb.org> writes: :> * Lars Marius Garshol wrote: :> :> > Huh? Forth dates back to the 60s, whereas Scheme is from 1975, and I'm :> > quite unsure of whether Chuck Moore knew Lisp at all. : Well *Lisp* dates back to the late 50s. Scheme may be from 75, : but Lisp is a different matter. And lambda calculus is, what, : 1949? Supposedly, Lisp was created in 1953, a year after Fortran, and is said to be the second higher-level (non-assembly) language written. But then... I wasn't around at that time, so what do I know. ;) -Arcege
- Previous message (by thread): Language extensibility (was: Why is tcl broken?)
- Next message (by thread): Language extensibility
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Python-list mailing list