In article <proto-03C726.21170110032008@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
Walter Bushell <proto@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> In article <uce-1C2679.07120702032008@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> Gregory Weston <uce@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > In article <fqds5k$p74$1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> > "Mr. X." <no_spam_please@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> >
> > > and if I need to decide what is the preffered language - what should
I
> > > decide to develop on ?
> >
> > If you want to develop software *for* Macs, the way to go today is the
> > Objective-C language and the Cocoa libraries. There are
freely-available
> > development tools from Apple to work on. There are other languages
that
> > can also leverage Cocoa, such as Perl, Ruby and AppleScript. You *can*
> > use just about any language you can name, though. I've just confirmed
> > that there are sup****ted builds of Icon and J on the Mac, for example.
> > Hard to get more niche than those, but there they are.
>
> Is there an Intercal for Macintosh?
Not as such, but there's a source release that's POSIX compliant and
should build fine.
G (OK, so the "mad or those who want to be" niche isn't well-covered.;)


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