Apologies for jumping into the thread late. On May 27, 3:25 pm, Roy Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Ben Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Is C no longer a "major" language? The long-standing convention there > > is for lower_case_with_underscores. > > Which dates back to the days of ASR-33's which only had one case (upper
The date is about right (actually, a little early: ASR-33, 1965; C, about 1970), but you can't program C on an ASR-33. Keywords are all lower case, and always have been. "IF" is a syntax error... > case, as a matter of fact). Does nobody else remember C compilers which > accepted \( and \) for { and }? I don't, but modern conforming compilers are supposed to accept ??< or <% for { and ??> or %> for }. Makes it awful hard to read, though, IMHO. Regards, -=Dave P.S. CamelCase sucks. ;-) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list