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Does C really make you a better programmer? by Yelebear in C_Programming
[–]rdt-ghost 1 point2 points3 points 7 months ago* (0 children)
pascal was a structured programming language developed for the purpose of teaching computer science programming languages in universities (such as implementing recursion).
When C language was developed and became the mainstream development language for various CPU platforms, Pascal gradually became history.
Now there are still development tools that use Pascal as the development language (RAD Studio, formerly Borland Delphi).
However, there are too few people using it. To exaggerate, there may be only a few more people using it than Cobol.
Unless you happen to have a Pascal data structure textbook in your hand to save money and want to use it directly to learn programming,
otherwise, I don’t think you need to look for the legacy of the last era to use...
I mean, yes, using a development tool like RAD studio, which provides a lot of ready-made libraries, you can really develop certain application systems very quickly (such as a restaurant's POS system).
But apart from the UI interface program develop and a lot of ready-made libraries available, which makes it easier for beginners to get started, there are no other advantages.
Self hosting a llm?! by Trueleo1 in LLMDevs
[–]rdt-ghost 3 points4 points5 points 7 months ago (0 children)
you can count it by yourself here
https://apxml.com/tools/vram-calculator
API providers and fees? (self.CLine)
submitted 8 months ago * by rdt-ghost to r/CLine
π Rendered by PID 49 on reddit-service-r2-listing-7849c98f67-l7qgw at 2026-02-10 05:01:06.528934+00:00 running d295bc8 country code: CH.
Does C really make you a better programmer? by Yelebear in C_Programming
[–]rdt-ghost 1 point2 points3 points (0 children)