Support for the language Modula-2 has been added. This includes support for the ISO/IEC 10514-1, PIM2, PIM3, PIM4 dialects together with a complete set of ISO/IEC 10514-1 and PIM libraries.
https://web.archive.org/web/20140714170318/http://fjf.gnu.de/gpc-future.htmlhttps://web.archive.org/web/20150908094319/http://www.g-n-u.de/pipermail/gpc/2010-July/thread.htmlIn a nutshell, keeping up with major version transitions of GCC was too hard. They were studying on reimplementing using a backend that wrote C, but no news about that was ever brought out. There was some support and discussion on the maillist for the versions that were out (gcc 4 based iirc) after that period till say 2015, but after that it has been quite quiet.The developers in that period also stated that they mostly stopped using Pascal in their daily work, which might have been the final straw.
But at the same time it's curious that GNU Modula-2 has survived.QuoteSupport for the language Modula-2 has been added. This includes support for the ISO/IEC 10514-1, PIM2, PIM3, PIM4 dialects together with a complete set of ISO/IEC 10514-1 and PIM libraries. -- https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-13/changes.html