I believe GNAT, ObjectAda & Irvine Compiler all
have Ada development environments for Linux.
Ken Burtch also has a Tiny IDE for Ada,
see TIA on http://www.vaxxine.com/pegasoft/homes/book.html
revbob wrote: "Almost nobody writes Ada for fun." At least you didn't say "nobody writes Ada for fun.":-) Having learned programming by looking at source code for Basic games at U of MD, I'm a firm believer that learning should be fun. For this reason I created a "Fun with Ada" lab at http://www.adapower.com/lab/adafun.html We're collecting text and grapical adventure games, controlling model trains, cars, and robots.
Re:Just answered your own question
on
Why Not Ada?
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· Score: 1
I work at Johns Hopkins Univ and there IS an Ada class in the catalog. At the current time there aren't any classes scheduled, because the people who need to use Ada already know it, or teach themselves "on the job." Check http://www.jhuapl.edu/sigada/index.html for information about the active Ada user's group that meets at JHU/APL.
There are too many validated compiler to list here. Check http://www.adaic.com/compilers/ for a list of validated compilers. This site also lists tools, training, and other resources available. Another good site to check out is http://www.AdaPower.com
I believe GNAT, ObjectAda & Irvine Compiler all have Ada development environments for Linux. Ken Burtch also has a Tiny IDE for Ada, see TIA on http://www.vaxxine.com/pegasoft/homes/book.html
revbob wrote: "Almost nobody writes Ada for fun." At least you didn't say "nobody writes Ada for fun." :-) Having learned programming by looking at source code for Basic games at U of MD, I'm a firm believer that learning should be fun. For this reason I created a "Fun with Ada" lab at http://www.adapower.com/lab/adafun.html We're collecting text and grapical adventure games, controlling model trains, cars, and robots.
I work at Johns Hopkins Univ and there IS an Ada class in the catalog. At the current time there aren't any classes scheduled, because the people who need to use Ada already know it, or teach themselves "on the job." Check http://www.jhuapl.edu/sigada/index.html for information about the active Ada user's group that meets at JHU/APL.
There are too many validated compiler to list here. Check http://www.adaic.com/compilers/ for a list of validated compilers. This site also lists tools, training, and other resources available. Another good site to check out is http://www.AdaPower.com