Retired Morris Dancer 0 Posted January 20, 2005 Share Posted January 20, 2005 I find that incredible. Take a look at this http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4172085.stm Link to post Share on other sites
9frtg3xRj07ju3f5hDfeQw 0 Posted January 20, 2005 Share Posted January 20, 2005 Somewhere on the remote Timor Sea coast of north Australia lives Patrick Nudjulu, one of three remaining speakers of Mati Ke. Link to post Share on other sites
js 0 Posted January 20, 2005 Share Posted January 20, 2005 Evolution is natural - death of some and creation of others. As you're aware, English is simply an amalgam of many ancient and more contemporary languages. Besides, it's all okay as long as we don't adopt 'American English' (whatever that is??!!) or, Saints preserve us, damnable French! Link to post Share on other sites
HeatherLocklearRocks 1 Posted January 20, 2005 Share Posted January 20, 2005 Any NEW languages happening? Link to post Share on other sites
tsondaboy 0 Posted January 21, 2005 Share Posted January 21, 2005 sure many fortran C++ html Link to post Share on other sites
newtoallthis 0 Posted January 21, 2005 Share Posted January 21, 2005 Do people "speak" C++? What exactly is C++ Link to post Share on other sites
Yuki's Passion 1 Posted January 21, 2005 Share Posted January 21, 2005 I speak shonben! Link to post Share on other sites
tsondaboy 0 Posted January 22, 2005 Share Posted January 22, 2005 C++ is a programming language. People speak C++ in order to communicate with the machines! Link to post Share on other sites
jstepp 0 Posted January 23, 2005 Share Posted January 23, 2005 man there aint nothin' wrong with good ol american english! I dunno whatcha talkin bout! Link to post Share on other sites
Retired Morris Dancer 0 Posted January 25, 2005 Author Share Posted January 25, 2005 Go on, give us an example of this C++! Link to post Share on other sites
montoya 0 Posted January 25, 2005 Share Posted January 25, 2005 Quote: Originally posted by Retired Morris Dancer: Go on, give us an example of this C++! This is one of my favorite PHP modules, the Kakasi extension lets you convert between kanji/hiragana/katakana/romaji on the fly. Here's the first few lines: static char *php_kakasi_argv_wakati[] = {"kakasi", "-w"}; static const int php_kakasi_argn_wakati = sizeof(php_kakasi_argv_wakati)/sizeof(char*); function_entry kakasi_functions[] = { PHP_FE(kakasi, NULL) PHP_FE(kakasi_asort, first_arg_force_ref) PHP_FE(kakasi_arsort, first_arg_force_ref) PHP_FE(kakasi_asorti, first_arg_force_ref) PHP_FE(kakasi_arsorti, first_arg_force_ref) PHP_FE(kakasi_split, NULL) {NULL, NULL, NULL} }; oops, this looks like C, not C++... Link to post Share on other sites
tsondaboy 0 Posted January 25, 2005 Share Posted January 25, 2005 here is an algorythm writen in C #include < stdio.h> #include < math.h> void main() { int angle_degree; double angle_radian, pi, value; /* Print a header */ printf ("\nCompute a table of the sine function\n\n"); /* obtain pi once for all */ /* or just use pi = M_PI, where M_PI is defined in math.h */ pi = 4.0*atan(1.0); printf ( " Value of PI = %f \n\n", pi ); printf ( " angle Sine \n" ); angle_degree=0; /* initial angle value */ /* scan over angle */ while ( angle_degree <= 360 ) /* loop until angle_degree > 360 */ { angle_radian = pi * angle_degree/180.0 ; value = sin(angle_radian); printf ( " %3d %f \n ", angle_degree, value ); angle_degree = angle_degree + 10; /* increment the loop index */ } } nothing special in here, just some sin fuction computations for angles Link to post Share on other sites
veronica 2 Posted January 25, 2005 Share Posted January 25, 2005 That looks very special!! Link to post Share on other sites
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