So?
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So?
English, French, German, C++ :D
English
80% French
20% English
:D :D :D :D
English
EspaƱol
cout << "C++";
WriteLn 'Pascal';
form1.print "Visual Basic"
...it's been awhile since I've done any pascal. Can someone refresh my memory and tell me if strings are in single or double quotes!? :D I forget ;[
Purge the evil filth of Pascal from your memory, and you don't have to worry. :D
Fluent bullsh...*cough* I mean, err, just English. Not good in any languages, not even VB :p :p :p
Ya well i speak English (well), French (i suck crap), Hindi, VB and some C++.
Can speack, read, write:
Bulgarian
English
Can Understand
Bosnian
Macedonian
Russian
Spanish
Slang English (US) :D
-Emo
English, and a little bit of German and Spanish.
English & Afrikaans. Also Ebcdic & Ascii. PostScript & PCL.
Did Latin at school a long time back, but there's not much call for it in these parts.
English, French, Hebrew, German (I try, unsuccessfully), and L337.
Glad to see you're gainfully employed- nothing too stressfull I hope, just lots of filthy lucre.
But what the heck is L337
I work for sex.Quote:
Originally posted by Jim Brown
Glad to see you're gainfully employed- nothing too stressfull I hope, just lots of filthy lucre.
*snicker*Quote:
But what the heck is L337
Easily: English
Moderately: French & German (and Latin, for if I meet any passing Romans)
Poorly: Serbo-Croat (as was), Scots Gaelic.
Quite a collection of dead languages there. :rolleyes:
English, Irish (Gaeilge / Gaelic), French
Can easily understand most Latin based languages, eg. spanish + italian.
Also studied german for 3 years, but I'm not very good at it.
English, Swedish, Finnish, Japanese, C++ :p
I only speak universal languages :
Mumblish, Grumble-ish and Mutterish.
:D
English and Mandarin Chinese
Watching Crouching Tiger without subtitles is ever better. :D
-C
Code:r = read
w = write
s = speak
u = understand
n = native
* = incompatible to most people
English r w s u
German r w s u n
French r w s
Japanese r s
* VB r w u
* C++ r w u
* HTML r w u
I have been accused of speaking english, but I stoutly deny the charge.
urdu
punjabi
English
French
Lil bit Spanish
I speak ***** ****** *** ** ****, *** ******, *** *****, ******* **** because ***** *** ******* **** ***** *** so that ***** *** ********* !!!!! :eek:
You forgot something else: You also speak ****, ****, and *** :DQuote:
Originally posted by thinktank
I speak ***** ****** *** ** ****, *** ******, *** *****, ******* **** because ***** *** ******* **** ***** *** so that ***** *** ********* !!!!! :eek:
:rolleyes:Code:r = read
w = write
s = speak
u = understand
n = native
* = incompatible to most people
English r w s u n
German r w s u
* C++ r w u n
* HTML r w u
* PHP r w u n
* JS r w u
* ASP r w u
* Perl r w u
CopyCat :p
Sorry about my english , but my scouse is dead good !
I keep thinking that is suppose to be No more crashing...is it??Quote:
Originally posted by abdul
Now more crashing!!
Ci iit Eqlis ii pi-Espaul. Ci iit-jiiu Scibse.
Literal Translation: Me speak English and little Spanish. Me speaking Scibse.
English
C++
Java
JavaScript
C
VB
QBasic
Spanish
HTML
JSP
and all versions of the above :D
Here's the languages I speak, in the order I learned them:
1. English
2. TI-99 Basic
3. French
4. MS-Basic
5. FORTRAN
6. C/C++
7. Pointer-ese (my fav.)
8. Visual Basic
9. SQL
10. Java
11. MDX
12. HTML (i guess you could call it a language...)
13. PDF (if html counts, this counts double...)
English, gibberish, baby talk (gibberish + drool), C++, VB, HTML, Java, some Klingon I picked up from Star Trek, and last but certainly least mute quadriplegic blinking.
:)
Do you mean TI89? There are 82,83,85,86,89, and 92 (there might be some earlier ones that I forgot)Quote:
Originally posted by DaveAMS
Here's the languages I speak, in the order I learned them:
1. English
2. TI-99 Basic
3. French
4. MS-Basic
5. FORTRAN
6. C/C++
7. Pointer-ese (my fav.)
8. Visual Basic
9. SQL
10. Java
11. MDX
12. HTML (i guess you could call it a language...)
13. PDF (if html counts, this counts double...)
> Do you mean TI89?
aww...you must have been one of those commodore users. (or was it a Radio Shack TRS-80?) Go back about 15-20 years, and there was a wonderful computer from Texas Instruments:
***** TI-99 4/A *****
Had its own programming language, called Basic. Loads of fun. I had a TI-99 with a peripheral expansion box (had a 360k, 5.25" floppy drive...one of the firsts), speech synthesizer (only took pc's 15 years to catch up), 300bps audio cassette storage system for programs (had that before the floppy) Man! Those were the good-old-days. I think I still have that beast somewhere. Maybe I can get it out...see if it still works.
Oh..... uhhh I thought you were talking about the TI line of scientific/graphing calculators....
http://www.vbforums.com/
Forgot about that...I use the HP. Does RPN count as a programming language?
I SPEAK 100% BULLSHIT!! :D :D :D :D :D
Yes you do. :p
English, Gibberish, French, German
Damn right it does. Add it to my list, forgot I knew RPN!Quote:
Originally posted by DaveAMS
Forgot about that...I use the HP. Does RPN count as a programming language?
My first ever scientific calc was an HP35 which I bought when I started University in 1974, then went upmarket to an HP45. I worked for HP for 2 years, 20 years ago and had 3 company calculators: an 11, a 12 and a 41. ALso had a company HP85 desktop computer - remember them? Then we went for CP/M on the HP125.
I've wondered elsewhere in this forum what the world would be like today if Digital Research's CP/M86 had become IBM's OS rather than Microsoft's.
One of my colleagues had a good laugh at my expense when I asked to borrow his calculator...my first experience with RPN. ("I think you're calculator's broken...")
Then I bought my HP-48G, read the manual cover-to-cover, and haven't looked back once.