I found this article the other day - https://tinyurl.com/3hjc92ur
It is about BASIC turning 60 this year. This the language a lot of us cut our teeth on and learned how to program in.
Me too! :) GW-BASIC in DOS was my early platform, with a bit of Apple BASIC and anything else I got my hands on that had a BASIC interpreter in the 80s.
The "learning computers for kids" books from the 80s were a source of a lot of BASIC programs I tried, some of which even ran correctly in GW-BASIC (instead of Commodore or Spectrum or whatever other system the book was originally written for). Good memories!
The Usborne computer books are available for free download as PDF, with gems like "Practise Your BASIC":
https://usborne.com/ca_en/books/computer-and-coding-books
A few years back I wrote a BASIC interpreter that ran on Atmel AVR chips (ATmega), complete with line numbers, a fun project. I have actually ended up using pieces of that project many times over the years since then. It's a long time since I wrote BASIC code but certainly the language has served me well.
And the infamous GOTO and GOSUB commands - the
creators of spaghetti code!
I can appreciate a good GOTO.
Happy birthday BASIC!
Cheers!
Chris/akacastor
--- Maximus 3.01
* Origin: Another Millennium - Canada - another.tel (21:1/162)