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For the purpose of this question, let's define a dead programming language as one for which you cannot buy a newly manufactured piece of hardware and install an operating system which will let you run a compiler or interpreter for your language, without requiring an emulator. Thus, assembly language for any architecture which isn't currently being manufactured is dead.

This is a fairly strict definition of dead, since many dead languages under this definition are still easily runnable through emulators or hardware bought from eBay. Bonus votes if hardware or emulators are completely unobtainable.

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Far to subjective and argumetive. Anything you say and there will be at least one who says it isnt dead. – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Feb 4 at 12:42
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133 Answers

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Atari BASIC, Turbo Basic XL, some 6502 machine code 68000 Assembler, GFA Basic (awesome editor)

(although "knowing" them is a bit exaggerated after all those years)

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I wrote some pretty fancy stuff in TECO once upon a time.

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Back in Russia, my first languages were Algol 60 (books only - no real machine time) and Electronika B3-34 programmable calculator. Then I dabbled in PL-1, Snobol, Prolog, Ada - still no computer time. First real code that I managed to run somewhere was C (not dead, no, no!) and Algol 68 (quite dead, imho). There was Modula-2 and Turbo Pascal 5.5 in the college. So here I am the walking graveyard of languages.

Edit: Oh damn - forgot the DB languages! Paradox, dBase, FoxPro (is it dead yet?), Clarion(!). All of these used professionally, too.

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I did my first coding in GWBASIC 3, which was born the same year as me if the copyright notice is to be believed.

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By definition, if someone knows a language, it's not dead. :-)

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I thought my mad NATURAL skills were now useless but Google proves me wrong.

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I know Oberon. Never saw it run in anything than a simulator. The course at college was since replaced by Java :)

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PLUS -- Programming Language for Univac Systems, a product of Sperry Univac for their 1100 Series Mainframes.

Snobol.

Struct$ -- a macro assembler language for Univac 1100 Series, written as ASM Procs by Dr. Patrick Haggerty.

C/PM commands, like PIP

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When will C# become a dead language?

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Forth

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PLCS - a version of PL/1 which ran on the ucsd p-system. Used it in 1981 at Rutgers for the comp Sci 101 course

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Z80 and 68000 assembly, and QL Basic of course ;)

I would also consider dBase and Clipper quite dead (as in 'technologically outdated')

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GIGL - GIGL Interactive Graphics Language (threaded-interpreted language for graphics programming used in 2D CAD application, project abandoned before release)

SOIL - Simple Object Interaction Language (internal app dev language, company out of business)

FlexAbility - OOP Extension to DataFlex 4GL (subsumed and obsoleted by DataFlex 3.0)

caveat: these are all languages that I wrote that are no longer available. Someone, somewhere may still have a copy of them, but I don't, and you can't buy one.

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I started out writing in Autocoder, Fargo and SPS for the 2nd generation IBM 1400-series mainframes. I think these qualify as dead languages, although we had a 1401 emulator card deck for early IBM 360s.

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SPL for the HP/3000 computer.

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Rexx, 386 protected mode assembler, Turbo Pascal, RMX

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CP/M Baby!!

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I still have a box of blank punchcards from my early programming days.

Until we moved in 2006, I had all the punchcards from my FORTRAN IV programming assignments (done back in 1979).

I also programmed assembler for a device known as the SCMP (scamp). Gave that away when we moved as well. I think it was one of the last ones around.

Modified assembler once for an IBM 3033.

I'd say 68HC11 assembler, but that microcontroller is actually still very popular as a teaching tool and as an embedded device. I still have one plus all the "bells and whistles" to connect it to a PC and program it (in assembler or C).

Cheers,

-Richard

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I heartily wish Fortran were dead.

I worked with a big Roman guy once who informed me in a booming Italian accent:

Mike, Fortran is like Rock and Roll. IT WILL NEVER DIE.

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Lotus 1-2-3 @macro(),@language() - death by @ signs. Although I think I've seen an emulator for 1-2-3.

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How about GPSS? Never used it professionally but I was pretty good with in a class I took.

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FORTRAN IV and probably even IBM FORTRAN G and H are dead, not because FORTRAN is dead (still alive and kicking) but because FORTRAN has moved on and those compilers are no longer available.

I think the questioner is on to an interesting idea, but it isn't quite the right question. First, the definition of dead is too strict. Second it's not enough that a language should be dead; it should be dead and interesting, or dead for an interesting reason.

Rexx was a nice language but I hear you can download free versions today that run on any unix box. And I think it's still central in the IBM mainframe world.

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Various assembly languages (pdp-11, z80, 6502/AppleII)

Various Pascals

Modula II - wrote a optics focus control module for a micro-fiche reader/digitizer that never got out of the lab

Various Cobol's and old Fortran variants

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SDL-88 (Specification and Description Language)

It was used in a CASE tool called VERILOG Object GEODE

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Apple's - Sweet16

6502, 6809, 68000,

UCSD Pascal, Applesoft Basic, Dec Basic Plus, Forth

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Imlac PDS-1, PDS-4 assembly language.

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Like lots of Flash guys I have a big wasted blob of brain marked... LINGO.

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Pascal - my "technology requirement" in high school was Pascal, Cobol, or (strangely) Cooking. It was a kind of sweet torture - staring at a monochrome screen in a dimly lit room stepping through code with the wafting smell of cookies and the sound of laughter coming from the other room. Then again, I'm sure none of the cooking kids are chefs now, whereas...

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If you want one of the more unusual languages, try the assembly langauge used by the microprocessor was used in the HP 41C calculator! This was a state of the art programmable calculator released in 1979. It had it's own reversh polish (RPN) programming language. However, under the hood was a microprocessor that could be accessed with special hardware attached.

Hackers eventually discovered how to dump the internal ROMs of the calculator and decode its instruction set. It used 56 bit registers and most of the instructions were 10 bites in length. And get this, the return stack only had 4 levels!

Eventually HP released thr source code to the calculator (called the NOMAS listings - NOt MAnufacturer Supported) and this enabled a flood of software to be written.

Those were the days!

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