Alex Martelli wrote: > IBM (PL/I's inventor and rabid defender) found out the hard way that > making the parser more complicated, slow and bug-prone in order to allow > such absurd obfuscation was NOT a popular trade-off -- despite IBM's > alleged monopoly power, PL/I is now basically dead while the older, > crankier languages that PL/I wanted to replace, Cobol and particularly > Fortran, are still quite alive (and with reserved words ALWAYS reserved > -- like in C, Python, Java, C#, Haskell, and basically every language > that's even halfway sensible;-).
Except Fortran doesn't have any reserved words either: PROGRAM KWDS REAL REAL,WRITE WRITE=1.0 REAL=2.0 WRITE(*,*)WRITE,REAL END (Not sure whether it's true in Fortran 9x.) Carl Banks -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list