When I attended the University of Minnesota in the early 80's, the Computer Science Department had just adopted Pascal as the way of the future. All projects were expected to be done in Pascal. Fortran was still allowed with exception to students who learned it prior to the Pascal cutover. They were so sure of Pascal that Fortran and Cobol were not requirements. In fact, as I recall the CS deptarment did not even offer Cobol. It was offered through the Business/Accounting department. I chose to take both Fortran and Cobol, for both curiosity sake, and there were alot of listings in the want ads for both. Didn't see alot of Pascal in the want ads. At the U of M at the particular time, C was one of those Unix things, although at the end of my schooling there, mid 80's, I believe MS had come out with a C compiler, as well as Borland. I believe that U of M actually offered a class in C by the time I left. If I am off on the MS/Borland C dates, anybody feel free to correct. On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 18:31:00 EST, Wirt Atmar <[log in to unmask]> wrote: >Pascal, once all the rage, is now essentially a dead language. But at the >height of its popularity, Microsoft did produce and sell an MS-DOS Pascal >compiler. I just looked on eBay and there's a copy of it there for $5. > * To join/leave the list, search archives, change list settings, * * etc., please visit http://raven.utc.edu/archives/hp3000-l.html *