... I really hate line numbers and GOTO.
There was always a "conventional"
goto in C, and now there are also "computed"
goto's there, yet we never had much of "spaghetti code" issues in C programming. Hence my welcome to
goto which often appears to be the only graceful way out in quite a number of practical coding situations (especially when one wishes to reuse blocks of similar code under different conditions), and my rejection of line numbers which thus appear to be the only reason of "spaghetti code" issue in retro-BASIC listings with their cumbersome yet indispensable line numbering.
'D' — deduction. Elementary, my dear Watson! (c)
It's unfinished, feels dated ...
Script BASIC was finished even way back when it first appeared on its original scriptbasic dot com site. It came in two flavors (Linux and Windows), was supplied with exhaustive user and developer documentation, and included a number of exemplary and practical extensions (both front- and back-end) to allow for future diversification and expansion.
Peter Verhas was as meticulous a language developer as there only can be. What his successors tried and achieved to a varying degree of success was building upon the solid base he was so prescient to provide.
SpecBas, on the other hand, is an unique project that offers something really original.
SpecBAS is essentially a more or less successful steam-punk project and should be treated as such. Nuff said.
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The havoc usually begins when somebody instigates, accidentally or on purpose, that silly discussion about "the most beginner-friendly BASIC" again — before the aging audience of chieftains with no Indians. Last time it was menn, this time it is B+. While you guys are at it, the beginners are mastering OxygenBasic.