←back to thread

218 points signa11 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
pjmlp ◴[] No.43681194[source]
> The reason I believe C is and always will be important is that it stands in a class of its own as a mostly portable assembler language, offering similar levels of freedom.

When your computer is a PDP-11, otherwise it is a high level systems language like any other.

replies(7): >>43682173 #>>43682246 #>>43682554 #>>43682928 #>>43683332 #>>43683914 #>>43701871 #
grandempire ◴[] No.43682246[source]
Which other popular language more accurately represents a random access machine of fixed word length?
replies(3): >>43682309 #>>43682371 #>>43682763 #
pjmlp ◴[] No.43682371[source]
I don't know, Ada, Modula-2, Object Pascal, PL/I, NEWP, PL.8, D, Zig, Mesa, ATS,....

But then again, you booby trapped the question with popular language.

replies(2): >>43682583 #>>43682636 #
grandempire ◴[] No.43682636[source]
Many of those languages do not have pointers - which are fundamental to how modern instruction sets work.
replies(1): >>43682903 #
pjmlp ◴[] No.43682903[source]
Yes they do, point an example from that group, and I will gladly prove you wrong.
replies(2): >>43682999 #>>43683399 #
1. ◴[] No.43682999[source]