Results
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Choice
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Votes
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Percent
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Machine Code
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14
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3.0%
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Assembly Language
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74
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15.9%
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C/C++
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167
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35.8%
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Java
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12
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2.6%
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LISP
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2
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0.4%
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Perl
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17
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3.6%
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TI-BASIC
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123
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26.4%
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Other
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39
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8.4%
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I don't program.
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18
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3.9%
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Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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nathan90
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any1 know a way to program the comp in asm??
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Reply to this comment
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6 December 2004, 22:19 GMT
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Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Anubis
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I only answered this way because I'm still new to the other languages...
TI-BASIC was my first programming foray, as it were
-Anubis (TI-BASIC number one)
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Reply to this comment
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30 September 2000, 06:54 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Stephen Dalton
(Web Page)
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Yeah, I know where you're coming from; I'm facing the same dilemma. I haven't been able to find the time (Or the resources, for that matter) to learn how to program in any language other than TI-BASIC. Now, given, TI-BASIC is a very simple language, but with its simplicity comes immeasurable limitations.
Would any of you fine chaps out there be willing to point me to a site where I could find programming guides for the TI-83+? Whenever I click on a TI-83+ assembly language link, it always brings me to a TI-83 ASM page. Now, not being very experienced in programming (Let alone assembly), I am unable to interpret whether the guides apply to the TI-83+ or the TI-83.
Please don't give me any BASIC links; I am already relatively skilled with the language. Anybody willing to check out my projects can check out my conic grapher program for the TI-83(+). BASIC is cross-compatible with the TI-83/+, right? If so, then the program is for both. This may seem like a lot of questions, but I'm a professional at rambling on and on and on and on...
BASICally, all I'm really looking for is a comprehensive, in-depth guide to assembly programming for the TI-83+. Thanks.
~ Stephen
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Reply to this comment
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4 October 2000, 03:58 GMT
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Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Anubis
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I program TI-BASIC now because I haven't really tried the other ones much yet... but someday... you just watch out people
becuase I am building my strength for the World Takeover using... QBASIC!!!
MUAHAUHAUHAUHAUAHUAHUAHA
-Anubis (TI-BASIC #1)
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Reply to this comment
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30 September 2000, 07:03 GMT
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Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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ZachaK
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>We trash windows me because windows is becoming more like MACos every version
Some simple equations:
MacOS = Good
Windows = Bad
Linux = Geeky but stable
MacOS + Linux = Good, not geeky, and stable.
Windows [trying to clone] MacOS = Bad, shows that MacOS is superior, Microsoft is a bunch of copycats
For example Windows ME includes a "excellent non-linear video editing program," I hear. Macs have had this, what over a year already in the form of iMovie?
Over a year ago, Apple revolutionized the computing industry with trancelucent plastic iMacs. PC manufacturers passed it off as a cheap marketing gag, but soon enough, PC rip-offs, some of which came IN THE SAME TRANSCLUCENT COLORS, appeared on the market.
If, by this point, you are unaware of my OS of choice, you must be really thick.
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1 October 2000, 22:04 GMT
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Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Omicron
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Oh my GOD! Another MacOS user! YAY! I knew we would come to power some day... BTW Windows ME is a crappy name don't you think? At first I thought ME meant ME, as in it's MINE a.k.a. more user friendly (from MacroHard? ROFL. I had a good laugh). Later, I found out ME was Millenium Edition, which is also a crappy name. Oh well, at least there are people who appreciate Macs. They are fast, reliable, and good to use with graphics eventhough the norm has only 16Megabytes of Video Mem. And also, not only are PC's copying the iMac, so are palm pilots, TI translucent calc covers, N64's, CD players, telephones, even chairs (yes, i have seen an Ad for translucent chairs, in 5 colors).
Omicron and the borg collective's infinite cents
P.S. LOWER YOUR SHIELDS AND PREPARE TO BE ASSIMILATED.
hehe
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3 October 2000, 05:20 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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cajunguy
(Web Page)
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Windows ME is NOT better than 95/98/2000. When I first got 98, I thought it was really buggy. Then I saw Windows ME, and about had a heart attack! Especially when I learned that there was no DOS prompt. This really bugged me. I still use Borland Turbo C++ 3.0 and Turbo Pascal 7.0, which are both DOS programs. Besides that, I was raised on a DOS computer. I can fly in DOS, but I am slowed down in Windows by click, click, clicking... Man, am I glad for shortcut keys...
Criticism is welcome, but you had better have good evidence. By the way, you can not write a *good* virus in QBasic. Try C++, lamer.
E-Mail link above...
My 2*4^1/3 cents worth...
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2 October 2000, 16:55 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Matt Hockenheimer
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O.K., I'll settle this debate once and for all - I run Windows ME (not by choice initially, though by choice now), and it DOES have a DOS prompt. It's just buried a little - it was in my Accessories folder when I got the computer, along with Wondows Explorer (probably to not confuse newbies). And even if yours is missing the icon, command.com is still there; just make a shortcut to it, and you have an instant DOS prompt (literally - before I found the one in Accessories, I made my own, and it made an MS-DOS Prompt icon insterad of a link to command.com when I did it).
Also, it is MORE stable than 98. 98 crashed on me every couple of days, and ME hasn't crashed on me once.
p.s., the QBasic thing was probably a joke
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3 October 2000, 21:55 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Matty500
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I'm sorry, but Dos is the very basis for programming. A command line is the most basic way to work with a computer. Batch files started everything. GUI is a CONVENIENCE however nice it might be and however much time it saves, almost EVERYTHING done in any GUI can be done in a CLI (command line interface IE: dos) Any effort to eliminate dos will simply eliminate configurability, and stop use. I agree that windows is moving away as much as possible, but then look at Macs...if something fails, crashes, what recourse does the average user have? GUI's by nature are unstable, there is SOO much working together, that something is always likely to fail. CLI's are simple by nature. There IS NO BLUE SCREEN OF DEATH in dos, because it NEVER crashes, NOT EVER, it can only get stuck in a loop function, and even at that, the loop can be broker, and why you ask, because dos is normally(although yes, it can be otherwise) SINGLE-TASKING. that allows the user to run one thing at a time, to solve problems that can't be solved under windows
just heed my rantings....
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30 September 2000, 23:30 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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calcfreak901
(Web Page)
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Hear, hear!
Induhviduals claim that multitasking is based on human thought processes, but, what do we call people who "multitask"? We say they have attention deficit disorder (yes, that's ADD). Now, do we really want computers that have ADD? Yeah, GUIs are nice and easy to use, but they take too much code for their value, and consequently are much more likely to be buggy. If you actually *TRY* to crash dos, about the only way to if you're running true dos (not that dos thingie from within win9x, but reboot to dos) is to have a major hardware error.
I personally would love to go back to the days of dos, but it seems that the 6 billion induhviduals populating this condemned planet prefer GUIs.
This rant is now concluded...
eofpi and the unimatrix's 45.599850351139 CLI-based cents
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2 October 2000, 00:02 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: What is your favorite way to program?
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Stephen Dalton
(Web Page)
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I was under the impression that it was database operating system...? I don't really know, though. By the way, here is what I think of Windows/Mac/Linux/DOS:
I have always used Windows. I DO NOT like it. Microsoft merely uses the same engine and dresses it up with fancy new graphics and "faster" ways to navigate to programs. The fact is, these "faster" ways are just for convenience purposes; when you click on a shortcut, it's just that many more lines of code that the computer will have to go through to get to your file. I'm not saying that it takes any significantly greater amount of time, but Microsoft should clean up their act and decide whether they want to make an entirely GUI based OS or go back to the DOS era.
I have very rarely used Mac OS, but I can confidently say that it is far superior to anything that those idiots at Microsoft can crank out. Mac (to the best of my knowledge) is entirely GUI-based, so when there is an error, it does not hang in pseudo-GUI mode (a la blue screen of death) where it's half operating in GUI and half in CLI. Instead, Mac OS keeps its cool and just stays in GUI, notifying you of the error and telling you how to fix it (usually). Mac hardware? All of it is PNP now..... which is not necessarily a good thing. It's just that much more that your computer has to go through itself. It would be better if whoever invented PNP had decided it would be a wonderful idea to move to Greenland.
Linux? I've never used it.
DOS? I love DOS. It may be "hard" to get where you want to go compared to the Windows GUI interface, but it is absolutely the most stable operating system ever put out by Microsoft (Oh yeah! That's right! Microsoft bought it off some company nobody's ever heard of... oh well). And if anybody thinks it's harder to type "cd\progra~1\games" than to click on "My Computer, C Drive, Program Files, Games", I highly recommend suicide.
Put simply, the only reason I don't have a Mac is because there is not much software out there written for a Macintosh environment. Macsoft, you say? Blecch. They don't do very well with porting the software.
~Stephen
Just my 2(x²-(x-1)(x+1)) worth.
P.S. Hey, for all you math freaks out there, when I was bored in precalculus, I dreamed up a formula the goes like this:
If a=a positive integer, then
a²-(a-1)(a+1)=1
If a=a negative integer, then
-(a²)+(a-1)(a+1)=-1
Based on this formula, guess how many cents I put in? :-)
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Reply to this comment
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4 October 2000, 19:50 GMT
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