Results 261 to 270 of about 135,566 (291)
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The American Mathematical Monthly, 1964
Abstract This programming language was constructed for a three-address computer, having a 9-digit binary operation code and 20-digit addresses. The instruction repertoire of the computer has all the basic arithmetical, logical and manipulative instructions.
Kenneth E. Iverson, E. K. Blum
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Abstract This programming language was constructed for a three-address computer, having a 9-digit binary operation code and 20-digit addresses. The instruction repertoire of the computer has all the basic arithmetical, logical and manipulative instructions.
Kenneth E. Iverson, E. K. Blum
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1985
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses programming languages used by computers. With machine language a programmer can instruct a computer to perform its most fundamental operations. Computers that can be programmed in machine language generally have a row of switches that can be set manually.
HARVEY M. DEITEL, BARBARA DEITEL
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Publisher Summary This chapter discusses programming languages used by computers. With machine language a programmer can instruct a computer to perform its most fundamental operations. Computers that can be programmed in machine language generally have a row of switches that can be set manually.
HARVEY M. DEITEL, BARBARA DEITEL
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Programming languages in economics [PDF]
Young economists sometimes ask which computer programming languages they should learn. This paper answers that question by suggesting that they begin with a high level language like GAUSS, GAMS, Mathematica, Maple or MATLAB depending on their field of specialization in economics.
Kendrick, D.A., Amman, H.M.
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1994
Publisher Summary Object-oriented programming (OOP) is a discipline; as such it is not tied to any particular programming language. Theoretically, at least, almost any language can be used for OOP. This chapter discusses the events leading up to the creation of OOP languages and describes the three languages. The languages, namely, Microsoft Visual C++
Phillip A. Laplante, Edward R. Dougherty
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Publisher Summary Object-oriented programming (OOP) is a discipline; as such it is not tied to any particular programming language. Theoretically, at least, almost any language can be used for OOP. This chapter discusses the events leading up to the creation of OOP languages and describes the three languages. The languages, namely, Microsoft Visual C++
Phillip A. Laplante, Edward R. Dougherty
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Introduction to Programming Languages
1995The primary aim of this chapter is to provide a short history of program language development and give some idea as to the concepts that have had an impact on Fortran. It concentrates on some but not all of the major milestones of the last 40 years, in roughly chronological order. The secondary aim is to show the breadth of languages available.
Jane Sleightholme, Ian Chivers
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The paper describes a succinct problem-oriented programming language. The language is broad in scope, having been developed for, and applied effectively in, such diverse areas as microprogramming, switching theory, operations research, information retrieval, sorting theory, structure of compilers, search procedures, and language translation.
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Minicomputer programming languages
ACM SIGMINI Newsletter, 1976Reduced hardware costs have made high level languages for minicomputers a necessity. A survey of some of the languages available. (FORTRAN, BASIC, FOCAL, PL-11, C, SPL, MPL, PLM, and BCPL) demonstrates the current need for a simple, portable, and readable minicomputer language.
Walter Gorman, Michael Broussard
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1988
Our first tutorial on programming languages [Bruce Blum’s article in M.D. COMPUTING, Vol. 1, No. 5] discussed how the evolution of computer languages has made it easier to write programs. The earliest computers did not have programming languages per se.
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Our first tutorial on programming languages [Bruce Blum’s article in M.D. COMPUTING, Vol. 1, No. 5] discussed how the evolution of computer languages has made it easier to write programs. The earliest computers did not have programming languages per se.
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Common Language: Business Programming Languages and the Legibility of Programming
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 2018The English-like business programming language COBOL saw widespread use from its introduction in 1960 well into the 1980s, despite being disdained by computer science academics. This article traces out decisions made during COBOLs development, and argues that its English-like appearance was a rhetorical move designed to make the concept of code itself ...
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An exploration of program as language
ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 2009In this paper we explore the idea that the code that constitutes a program actually forms a higher-level, program specific language. The symbols of the language are the abstractions of the program, and the grammar of the language is the set of (generally unwritten) rules about the allowable combinations of those abstractions. As such, a program is both
Elisa Baniassad, Clayton Myers
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