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CELLAR: a high level cellular programming language with regions

Proceedings 8th Euromicro Workshop on Parallel and Distributed Processing, 2002
This paper describes CELLAR, a language for cellular programming which extends the cellular automata model through the concept of regions. Regions are spatiotemporal objects that define zones of the automaton (set of cells), containing interesting and meaningful data patterns or trends that can be defined as events.
Gianluigi Folino, Giandomenico Spezzano
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High level languages for efficient parallel programming

2012 International Conference on High Performance Computing & Simulation (HPCS), 2012
Efficient parallel programming has always been very tricky and only expert programmers are able to take the most of the computing power of modern computers. Such a situation is an obstacle to the development of the high performance computing in other sciences as well as in the industry.
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Programming the 68000 in high-level language for VME

Microprocessors and Microsystems, 1984
Abstract Many choices of VME hardware module now exist but software still continues to be the major cost in systems development. As development teams face more complex projects, productivity can be improved by four approaches: the use of standard system architecture, the use of software building blocks, the use of better tools and an increase in the ...
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Identification in a high-level graphics programming language

Computers & Graphics, 1987
Abstract This paper describes programming elements for the identification in the high-level graphics programming language PASCAL/Graph [1]. The result is an extended form of the so-called indirect identification model. The identification process takes place in three steps: the user interaction, the search through the relevant graphical data, and the ...
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Knowledge-base programming in high-level languages

Information and Software Technology, 1990
Abstract The paper describes a method for building rule-based systems within conventional data-processing (DP) environments. This is achieved by using tools to represent, capture, and test rule-based knowledge and, subsequently, to convert this knowledge into source code in high-level languages such as PASCAL, COBOL, or C. The rule-based knowledge is
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The high-level graphics programming language PASCAL/Graph

Computers & Graphics, 1982
Abstract A high-level programming language like PASCAL offers data types, variables, constants and operators, with which the programmer can represent the actual world as a model inside the computer. The world of numbers and text has been represented in the computer for many years by various kinds of variables.
Wilhelm Barth   +2 more
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High-level language support for programming distributed systems

Proceedings of the 1992 International Conference on Computer Languages, 2003
A strategy for simplifying the programming of heterogeneous distributed systems is presented. The approach used is based on integrating a high-level distributed programming model, the process model, directly into programming languages. Distributed applications written in such languages are portable across different environments, are shorter, and are ...
M.T. Kennedy   +11 more
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A High Level Stigmergic Programming Language

2006
Terrestrial social insects build architecturally complex nests despite their limited sensors, minimal individual intelligence and the lack of a central control system. [3] Many of the nest structures emerge as a response of the individual insects to pheremones, which the insects themselves can emit.[2] The work in [4] extrapolated from social insect ...
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Portable Programming in High-level Languages

1982
Most portable software is written in a standard high-level language such as Fortran or Cobol. However, merely using a high-level language does not guarantee portability. Possible problems with the portability of programs written in high-level languages are considered in general terms here, while problems specific to particular high-level languages are ...
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Evolution of the high level programming languages

ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 1998
Programming languages have emerged as the powerful tools we use to describe algorithms for execution by computers. Ever since need for such languages was felt half a century ago, numerous languages have been designed and implemented with varying goals and for different application areas.
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