On Jan 4, 2012 9:49 PM, "Arno Kletzander" <Arno_1983 at gmx.de> wrote:
One of the things that frustrates me with C21 OSs
and languages is
that the graphics facilities of machines are locked away behind the
high walls of libraries and APIs designed for professional developers
- which are simply too hard for an interested amateur such as myself.
Are you aware of FreeBASIC (the one with the nice horsy logo) and had a
look
whether that floats your boat? This is an extendable freeware BASIC
programming environment for Windoze
(I dunno if it's available for other platforms
too, I don't care at the
moment) which can be enabled to do sound, Windows GUI
widgets, networking
primitives and the like via downloadable modules/libraries, which should be
well documented and examples provided.
I located and installed it a few years ago as a win- and TCP-enabled
replacement
for Turbo BASIC, both for my usual day-to-day diddling and
intending to program a control application/"driver" for some
not-quite-xterm, but couldn't scrounge up the spare time for more than a
very cursory examination 'til now.
I am indeed aware of it but I've not really looked at it yet. I must do.
All my pro type mates are horrified by the mere thought & treat any mention
of it as much if I'd said that I thought I might try intravenous heroin
just for a laugh. ;-)
Some want me to try Python, some Ruby, some Lisp, some Scheme, some Perl.
One suggests FreePascal.
None approve of Free BASIC. Poor unloved thing.
- LP