"They" were also developing languages of their own, also in countries not 
of English language, such as Pascal, Modula, Scala (Switzerland), Kotlin 
(Russia) and using English words as key words. It is understood by everyone 
in the world who already knows some other language ;-).

Am Montag, 29. April 2019 15:37:45 UTC+2 schrieb fbaube:
>
> It's interesting to see this!
>
> Back in the early 1970s I wondered what the programming languages in other 
> countries (not-USA) looked like - what were the keywords, etc. 
>
> Well, it turns out that (AFAIK) they were using the same compilers and the 
> same interpreters, and languages with the same English keywords, because 
> (also AFAIK) nobody was writing non-English-keyword compilers in Europe and 
> nobody was patching existing binaries (like BASIC.EXE) to change the 
> keywords contained in executables.
>
> cheers - fred
>
> On Monday, April 29, 2019 at 11:58:50 AM UTC+3, yvan...@gmail.com wrote:
>>
>>
>> In France we have WINDEV  
>>
> giving something like    
>> '''
>> // Le document sera enregistré en noir et blanc
>> SI TwainVersJPEG("C:\Temp\MaPhoto.JPEG", 0, Faux, TwainNoirBlanc) = Vrai 
>> ALORS
>> Info("Le document a été enregistré")
>> SINON
>> Erreur("Le document n'a pas été scanné")
>> FIN
>>
>

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