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cashsterling | 9 months ago

Yeah... my intro CS class was in C and Ada95 (I'm not a CS guy btw, just took the class). I actually preferred Ada over C... but continued to program in C for other classes because of compiler availability; I had to do all my Ada programming on Sparc workstations at school.

I personally think that AdaCore, and friends, missed an opportunity in the early 2000's to fully embrace open source... they left a big gap which Rust has filled nicely.

I still think Ada is a great programming language. When a question comes up along the lines of: "what's the best programming language nobody's heard of?", or "what's the best programming language that is under used?" Ada is usually my first answer. I think other good answers include F#, <insert LISP flavor>, Odin, Prolog, Haxe, and Futhark (if you're into that sort of thing).

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pjmlp|9 months ago

We are on Ada 202x nowadays being discussed, and in a world where FOSS tool makers have problems making a sustainable business, always changing licenses, there are still 7 Ada vendors selling compilers.

ummonk|8 months ago

And only AdaCore / GNAT will ever support Ada 202x. The language has left the legacy vendors behind.

anthk|9 months ago

Libre compilers do not impose restrictions on output.