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Ask HN: Are there any programming languages that are completely extinct?

3 点作者 kasperset5 个月前
Just wondering if there any programming language that were once very popular but now dead. I do not mean less popular but not used at all. I guess once the programming language is popular enough to cross the inflection point, it will have a very slow "death" if at all. In other words, I think they will have a long tail decay but never completely gone. Any thoughts.

8 条评论

taylodl5 个月前
It may depend on what we mean by &quot;dead.&quot; I&#x27;m thinking hobbyists may still use just about anything just to tinker with things, but I don&#x27;t think that&#x27;s particularly interesting in this context. What&#x27;s more interesting is whether it&#x27;s still being used in a commercial context?<p>In a commercial context there&#x27;s different stages of dying, right?<p>Terminally Ill - the programming language is descending down the TIOBE index and is being used for fewer and fewer new projects.<p>Dying - the programming language isn&#x27;t being used at all for new projects but is still being used in existing deployments. Minor modifications may be made, but nothing requiring a significant effort.<p>Dead - the programming language isn&#x27;t being used at all for new projects nor is it being used in existing deployments.<p>Using these terms, I don&#x27;t know if there are any Dead languages, but if there were, I&#x27;d imagine it would be Basic from the 80s (Apple, Commodore, Atari) and UCSD Pascal. I&#x27;d <i>love</i> to know if I&#x27;m wrong or what other languages would be &quot;Dead&quot; in the way I&#x27;ve defined it.
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not_your_vase5 个月前
As long as there are machines that can run it, it won&#x27;t die most probably. Especially nowadays, people love writing retro compilers for modern systems.<p>However once there are no machines to run it, I think it can die out. Of course that depends on the definition of language. Have no idea if the hole-arrangement on punchcards could be considered a separate programming language (or just proto-ASM or whatever). If it&#x27;s a separate language however, than it did go extinct, due to the punch cards&#x27; extinction.
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mikequinlan5 个月前
PL&#x2F;360 <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;PL360" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;PL360</a><p>&quot;PL360 (or PL&#x2F;360) is a system programming language designed by Niklaus Wirth and written by Wirth, Joseph W. Wells Jr., and Edwin Satterthwaite Jr. for the IBM System&#x2F;360 computer at Stanford University. A description of PL360 was published in early 1968, although the implementation was probably completed before Wirth left Stanford in 1967.&quot;
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kjs35 个月前
Depending on your definition of &#x27;popular&#x27;, Xerox Mesa &amp; Cedar? Algol-68?
beardyw5 个月前
Of course in the 70s there were (to us today) weird and wonderful devices popping up with programming languages of their own. I used a few. Could I name theirvlanguage, no. They are probably long gone.<p>So gone, but not very popular!
AnimalMuppet5 个月前
Maybe I&#x27;m showing my ignorance, but... does anyone still use Autocode?<p>BLISS?<p>CLU?<p>SNOBOL?<p>It was harder than I expected to find examples, though.
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JohnFen5 个月前
I can&#x27;t think of a single one, now that you mention it.
busterarm5 个月前
Even PL&#x2F;I is still in use...<p>Maybe Simula?