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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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BASIC and your old Fortran.

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Lockheed SUE ASM - A PDP-11 knockoff, only used in DatagraphiX Auto-COM equipment to my knowledge.

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A little late for answers, but just yesterday I discovered my personal version of MineSweeper on my TI-85 graphing calculator. I'm pretty sure that language is dead by now. :)

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Amiga Copper lists

The first (mainstream) GPU programming language.

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PL/1. I remember late nights carrying a deck of punch card to the hopper.

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  1. OjectPAL (Paradox for Applications, which seemed to have extremely little to do with object-orientation)

  2. Informix 4GL (early-90s)

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BBC Basic, GWBasic and whichever strangely cooked-up dialect of Pascal the old Pyramid RISC machines used to run.

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BASIC09
Pascal09

I did a checkup/list recently, and probably some of the OTHER 35 languages are dead...

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Do zombie languages count? If so, then I know VBScript and pre-.Net VB.

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COBOL

But it's not really dead it's the unholy Undead language.

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I know a deadly programming language.

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Delphi

Pascal

Turbo Basic

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