Here's a short program for the CPC that will calculate your age in days and tell you on which day you were born. How many times have you woken suddenly in the middle of the night to ask yourself in a state of panic. "For how many days have I lived?" Probably never. Which makes this short but fun program pure trivia. Days Old not only answers that question precisely by telling you your age in days, but also tells you during which day of the week you were born. (It can't tell you at what time or how much you weighed, but that's what mothers are for.) For example, if you were born on the 3oth of April in 1969. you were born on a Wednesday and as of the 1st of November. 1990. you are all of 7853 days old. Based on fairly simple calculations, months have no limits and the dates you supply are not checked against a calendar: accuracy depends on user honesty. You can. for example, use the date of the 29th of February of a non-leap year and the days will still be calculated. Likewise you can use an outrageous date such as the 45th of June and it will work. Not bad if you wish to astound friends with your vast knowledge (?) or if you're a fan of personal trivia! TAU ★ AMSTRAD CPC ★ DOWNLOAD ★ |
|
CPCrulez[Content Management System] v8.7-desktop Page créée en 329 millisecondes et consultée 1389 foisL'Amstrad CPC est une machine 8 bits à base d'un Z80 à 4MHz. Le premier de la gamme fut le CPC 464 en 1984, équipé d'un lecteur de cassettes intégré il se plaçait en concurrent du Commodore C64 beaucoup plus compliqué à utiliser et plus cher. Ce fut un réel succès et sorti cette même années le CPC 664 équipé d'un lecteur de disquettes trois pouces intégré. Sa vie fut de courte durée puisqu'en 1985 il fut remplacé par le CPC 6128 qui était plus compact, plus soigné et surtout qui avait 128Ko de RAM au lieu de 64Ko. |
|
|