In college, we had to use Hungarian pseudocode. I still have PTSD from it, especially as the teacher was a psycho that had a meltdown every time her "how do you do fellow kids" moment terribly backfired, most infamously by putting Twilight references into a test (everybody audibly cringed reading the tests).
ZILtoid1991
IDK, but this seems like wankery to me. Just google it if you want to know about it, the AI isn't an "all knowing being" nor "the arbitrer of truth".
I have a feeling that a new logical fallacy will soon emerge (if it isn't already widespread on certain places of the internet), that will be "X is true because the LLM said so".
Old people are weird. I know some that still think a 90's Golf Mk.3 is still a new automobile, and the worst ones thought that a teacher can easily afford a newly-built home, because it costed HUF1 000 000 in the previous system, they just need to "make four kids to be eligible for extra tax writeoffs". I even saw someone, likely in early dementia, that cried when they learned that bread costed way more than HUF100.
I do not think C is going to completely go away. If nothing more, it will be used as an ABI, to glue various other languages together.
On the other hand, C is going to fade out, not just for memory safety issues, but also due to "language jank". Usually language design choices that made sense on 60's and 70's mainframes, but no longer needed, and later languages tried to rectify them in their "C-influenced" syntax, but had the issue of also being much higher level than C.
Also Rust is just the most hyped replacement for C, and depending on your usecase, other languages might be much better. D has a very close syntax to C without the jank, expecially when used in the betterC mode.
おはようございます!