AmiBlitz3
wonkey
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AmiBlitz3 | wonkey | |
---|---|---|
11 | 7 | |
117 | 119 | |
3.4% | 1.7% | |
9.3 | 3.5 | |
about 1 month ago | 11 months ago | |
Assembly | Assembly | |
- | zlib License |
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AmiBlitz3
- AmiBlitz 3.9.8
- AmiBlitz v3.9.8
- AmiBlitz3 – a BASIC-compiler for 68k-Amiga
- AmiBlitz v3.9.5
- How to make a videogame for an Amiga?
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Which is better?
deffo a vote for - https://github.com/AmiBlitz/AmiBlitz3
- AmiBlitz 3.9.3
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Best books to start coding in BASIC?
If I really wanted to learn a retro dialect of BASIC I might consider AmiBlitz on the Amiga (https://github.com/AmiBlitz/AmiBlitz3).
- AmiBlitz 3.9.1
- AmiBlitz 3.9.0
wonkey
- Wonkey
- Wonkey: A cross-platform FOSS programming language by the creator of BlitzBasic
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QBasic.net
Lovely, it's like if LCARS and Pingus built a website together. No complaints here, it brings back a lot of good memories!
I took a deep dive into BASICs earlier this year and came away with some unexpected results. In software, these stood out:
- SmallBASIC ...wow this is quite an interesting set of tools, and I was impressed by ongoing developments. There are some faux-OOP convenience features even, like myfakeobject.value = 10
- QB64pe ...this really holds your hand and the documentation is great.
- To-try: https://wonkey-coders.github.io/
In discussions with developers, I was surprised to find some extremely intense, protective vibes. I'd consider "my BASIC == my childhood" a pretty reliable model. Simple how-to queries that would get ordinary answers in other languages usually brought out some defensive responses.
In group discussions there was also an interesting overlap between "strangely protective my past" and "prefers writing BASIC" that came up over and over while I was trying to figure out the overall ecosystem of languages.
For example, somebody wrote an algorithm example full of $ii $tk $zx and so on and I asked them about this (who knows, maybe there's some logical reason to not use my_variable_name for example) and the tone became very defensive, even insisting that maybe it was wrong but they are never going to change! Which didn't exactly have anything to do with what I was asking...
In the various online forums there was frequently an ongoing argument over who left, for what reasons, where they ended up, and are you a member of that forum, and so on.
Overall there was a surprising amount of interpersonal drama given the overall active surface area of this language. And a lot of emotionality that just isn't as prominent in other communities I experienced, even though it's probably there at some level.
Since I have spent a lot of professional time doing relationship work with techies, these things kind of wore me out pretty quick, and I found myself heading to some more modern languages just to get beyond the unaddressed, or unaddressable, feels-factor.
Still, I look forward to coding some more in the future and particularly in trying out some of the newer tools I discovered.
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Wonkey Game Programming Language (v2021.04) is available
Project page: https://github.com/wonkey-coders/wonkey
- Wonkey Game Programming Language (v2021.04)
What are some alternatives?
XC-BASIC - A compiling BASIC dialect for the Commodore-64
Beef - Beef Programming Language
aqb - A BASIC Compiler and IDE for Amiga Computers
BBCSDL - BBC BASIC for SDL 2.0: for Windows, Linux (86), MacOS, Raspberry Pi, Android and iOS.
zxbasic - The Sinclair ZX Spectrum BASIC compiler!
ring - Simple and flexible programming language for applications development
unzx0_68000 - Free, zlib licensed ZX0 decompressor for the 68000
wordlos - WORDLE for DOS, written in assembly
apple2js - An Apple II emulator originally written in Javascript, now being converted to TypeScript
civil-war-strategy - A strategic level, one or two player wargame simulating the American Civil War (1861-1865).
bb2-mode - Emacs major mode for Blitz Basic 2 (a basic compiler for the Amiga)
keyman - Keyman cross platform input methods system running on Android, iOS, Linux, macOS, Windows and mobile and desktop web