"Bob Gailer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote > although is says 'resulting in a [sic] executable". Not sure what > that > means, unless the obvious - an .exe file which when run displays > "Hello > World!". In that case 263 bytes is remarkable.
It does and it is. That is Forth's strong point, it is often in the same sort of size as assembler. Often tighter than C (which needs to statically link its stdlib). Forth has such a small runtime footprint and the compiler only links in the lib functions it actually needs. As the programs get bigger they use more of the library functions and quickly grow to be comparable to C - hence the reason Sun used it for their bootloader but not for their OS! But it is wierd... >> 2 >> 2 >> + >> . >> >> As it uses Reverse Polish Notation and is stack oriented Again very powerfuil in producing small code. My first pocket calculator was a Novus which used RPN (I couldn't afford an HP!) and once you get used to it you can do amazing things in far fewer keystrokes than on a conventional calculator. Alan G. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor