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Compiled.
Yes.
C++, Java, smalltalk, simula, perl, python, ruby, D, Eiffel, JavaScript...
Any. As long as a language has the programming structures to access memory directly (DMA, IO ports, IRQ) AND it can be compiled (isn't run at a command interpretor) it can be used to create an operating system: the more general the language, the more platforms that OS can run on i.e. Binary/Machine Language is extremely hardware specific, Assembler less so, C (and Pascal and Fortran) even less so, C++/Smalltalk/Eiffel the least. An OS doens't have to be 50 quintillion lines of code; the original Linux kernel and a few Gnu utilities ran on one floppy disk (1.44 meg), DOS 5 was 3 floppy disks, Windows 95 took about 150 meg on a CD, Windows NT about 300meg on CD, and so on. As each version of operating system grows in features, so does it storage footprint.
The builder, engineer Gustav Eiffel, used a structural design by Maurice Koechlin.
mainly, it is not very commonly used...
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uy
Bertrand Meyer is an academic, author, and consultant in the field of computer languages.He created the Eiffel programming language.
its blue
It is very big.
Yes.
"Eiffel" in French refers to the famous Eiffel Tower, a wrought-iron lattice tower in Paris, France. It was named after the engineer Gustave Eiffel, who designed and oversaw its construction.
Ada, C++, CLU, Dylan, Eiffel, Lisp, Perl, Python and Smalltalk.
C++, Java, smalltalk, simula, perl, python, ruby, D, Eiffel, JavaScript...
It's a computer language AND a tower in France, the name deriving from a region in Germany.
Gustave Eiffel