Talk:Event driven programming language

Im just a beginner in programmming, so i would like the geniuses of these industry to enlighten me. I would really appreciate it if one of you could tell me the pro and cons of event driven programming, object oriented programming.
 * Short answer: the Wikipedia is not a discussion forum. Go to the relevant Usenet groups, or something. JöG 20:26, 5 August 2006 (UTC)

Purpose of this article?
This article does not make sense. I would expect it to define a sub-set of programming language, but it nicely evades the language part entirely, talking about the event-driven programming paradigm in general instead. After reading it, I'm not even sure event-driven programming languages exist. JöG 20:32, 5 August 2006 (UTC)

I think it needs a total rewrite, I would question some of the assertions in the first paragraph and rather than saying that some programming languages make it easy, it would be better to list some common ones (C# and VB spring to mind, also C++ with MFC or OWL). I also think it would be more accessible if the pseudo code were changed to something like VB. Furthermore the article needs to be renamed to something like "Event-driven programming style". Also list some other uses of event-driven style, such as interrupt/device handlers.Rich257 20:57, 16 September 2006 (UTC)

Since Event-driven programming already exists, and is a better article for that title, I don't think the article should be renamed as suggested. I mistaken renamed it & then restored it when I realised. Perhaps this article should be deleted if it is trying to be "event driven programming", or re-written to actually tackle the language issue if it is going to retain its current title? Windymilla 21:56, 4 October 2006 (UTC)

briefly explain about event driven programming languages

Moved to Event-driven programming
As noted by others, this did not describe a programming language, but rather a paradigm (which can be used in most programming languages). I have moved all the content into Event-driven programming. Nate 16:19, 6 December 2006 (UTC)