"Adam Turk" writes: > Yes, C is like Latin. No nation on earth uses Latin as a common tongue. > Therefore, it never changes - it is dead. Consider this, though. Large numbers of programmers program in C today. It's definitely not dead in that sense. If you consider change a measure of life, Lisp ought to be the winner. It certainly has more mutations than any other base language, by quite a margin. Arguably it's struggling, though. Unfortunately. > C is arguably the one language we cannot let go of. Don't forget FORTRAN and COBOL. :-( (and we'll never be rid of Visual Basic) > From it springs all other contemporary languages. If you consider "all" to mean Java, C++, and Db. Mike