Talk:Quadriga
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If you are a programmer/software engineer, whatever, people invariably want to know "what language you program in". I went to a four year university program and have 30 years of professional experience (2011) so I feel I can define myself as just a programmer, not a X programmer (see Bane). Nonetheless there is a factual, if not simple answer to the query. See the long (JDCM) resume ("Resume>>Resumes>>JDCM") for historical particulars, it's mostly been dialects of C which is what is mostly used, but the obverse indicates my preferences. Root 19:16, 23 September 2011 (UTC)
Update
A little more to say on this:
- By C dialects, AKA Algol-like langs mean basically all the comon ones today. Virtually all of my paid experience is with them as of 2014.
- Smalltalk, the main exceptions to above, is probably the last I'll be able to do something with in DS. The paid experience with it was long ago.
- Haskell, Lisp, and Prolog will be integral in the MCP-DCP implementation.
- The method of ∫ is WFL, a generalization of the Burroughs MCP (currently Unisys) product:
- which uses an Algol68G backend
- which uses a prempt mode linux kernel
- which provides unified tasking across langs
- and decomposition of tasks into a common lib of IAL design procs, with implementation spread across arbitrary application implementation langs, with Haskell as first among these, division of labor with DS as per the obverse.