Originally posted by iconara
well, you don't see much of COBOL and Fortran these days,
So, you haven't been around much lately
awk and sed were replaced by perl decades ago
Yep, you haven't been around lately
and tcl has seen it's day...
Partly true...but, see above
Lisp was never big outside the artificial intelligence-research institutes apart from the mad hackers making platform games for emacs (which I hear is written in lisp) list-interpreter.
You have't been around UNIX much, have you; you would have
known otherwise...but, don't let that disturb you
PL/I is so outdated that I have never heard of it,
it figures, it's only the second most popular programming language, immediately after COBOL (hint: both are used mainly in big iron environments--banks, insurances, business departments, nothing really earth-shattering)
and all the C-programmers have migrated to C++, there's no one who uses a plain C-compiler these days.
Wow, now that is something new; I bet nobody told that to all of those C programmers around, especially those in embedded and operating system arena
Even the objective-c coders can hack c++...
Now I get it--you are talking about coders; I was talking about programmers. If you cannot tell the difference, you haven't been around enough
so the answer is probably no. there is no point in using archaic languages, although it's cool knowing them, of course. i wish I knew Lisp. [/B]
Unless, of course, you want to be paid for programming in them. But, that happens only after you have been around enough to have to pay your own bills, I guess
I must agree, though, LISP is currently the least required one of the above, used mainly in mechanical engineering (ever heard of AutoCAD?)