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Groups > alt.comp.microsoft.windows > #3389
| Date | 2026-05-06 15:06 -0600 |
|---|---|
| From | Frica See <fric@fr.ac> |
| Newsgroups | rec.food.cooking, aus.general, alt.comp.microsoft.windows |
| Subject | Re: Sketti is Simmering on the Stove 4/23/2026 |
| Message-ID | <20260506150623.3a5b4f8a@z-z> (permalink) |
| References | (11 earlier) <1778017478-4746@newsgrouper.org> <10tf08a$12itn$1@dont-email.me> <20260506112650.77459e35@z-z> <10tg362$1dusl$1@dont-email.me> <10tg43b$1ec0s$1@dont-email.me> |
Cross-posted to 3 groups.
On Thu, 07 May 2026 05:16:54 +1000
Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid> wrote:
> On Wed, 6 May 2026 15:01:21 -0400, Ed P <esp@snet.n> wrote:
>
> >On 5/6/2026 1:26 PM, Frica See wrote:
> >> On Wed, 6 May 2026 09:05:14 -0000 (UTC)
> >> Cindy Hamilton <chamilton5280@invalid.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>> On 2026-05-05, dsi1 <user4746@newsgrouper.org.invalid> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> My father-in-law was a programmer at a low level in the Army. He
> >>>> was very good at his job. He had the darnedest time understanding
> >>>> Windows i.e., a high level language.
> >>>
> >>> Windows is not a language.
> >>
> >> Try again:
> >>
> >> Is Windows a computer language?
> >> Windows is implemented primarily in C, with a small amount of
> >> assembly language. Parts of the GUI portion are implemented in
> >> C++. The user mode utilities are implemented in a C, C++, C#, and
> >> other languages. Linux-based OSs and Unix variants are primarily
> >> implemented in C with a small amount of assembly language.
> >
> >Thanks for proving Cindy correct. Windows is an interface that is
> >built on languages like C and C++. Makes sense.
>
> Yes. A book is written in a language but a book is not a language.
Neither is a typical book user addressable to alter the language and
the outcome:
Write and Run Your First CodeCreate a File: In your editor, go to File
> New File and save it with the correct extension (e.g., .py for
Python, .html for web, .cpp for C++).Write Code: Type your logic. For
example, in a Python file: print("Hello Windows!").Run the Program:In
an IDE: Look for a "Play" or "Run" button at the top.In the Terminal:
Open the integrated terminal (Ctrl + `) and type the run command
(e.g., python yourfile.py).
> Strange confusion from the cheerful duo.
Strange semantics from the Oztard.
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Re: Sketti is Simmering on the Stove 4/23/2026 Frica See <fric@fr.ac> - 2026-05-06 15:06 -0600
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