Results 211 to 220 of about 74,863 (264)
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Programming language semantics

ACM Computing Surveys, 1996
A programming language possesses syntax and semantics. Syntax refers to the spelling of the language’s programs, and semantics refers to the meanings of the programs. A language’s syntax is formalized by a grammar or syntax chart; such formalizations are found in the back of language manuals.
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Program Control Language: a programming language for adaptive distributed applications

Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing, 2003
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Brian Ensink   +2 more
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The programming language oberon

Software: Practice and Experience, 1988
AbstractThis is the defining report of the programming language Oberon.
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Formatted programming languages

Software: Practice and Experience, 1981
AbstractThis paper presents a systematic approach to formatted language design that incorporates formatting within the syntax of programming languages. The approach includes: a metasyntax to ensure that program text is foldable, not only to avoid right margin overflow but also to preclude constructs which are visually confusing or ambiguous; a set of ...
Gordon A. Rose, Jim Welsh
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Programming Languages III

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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Common Language: Business Programming Languages and the Legibility of Programming

IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 2018
The 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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Programming Language Processors

1966
Publisher Summary A programming language processor is considered a formal method for translating from any specified programming language to machine language. This chapter focusses on theoretical or conceptual considerations underlying the design of programming language processors.
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The Symmetry programming language

Proceedings of 8th International Parallel Processing Symposium, 2002
Symmetry is a parallel programming language intended for specifying scalable computation and communication in (K/spl minus/1) dimensions of discrete space and one dimension of discrete time. A program specifies causal and geometric relationships between spacetime regions and indicates when and where each subcomputation takes place. Symmetry unifies the
Kong Li, David Jefferson
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Assertions in programming languages

ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 1980
The notion of embedding assertions in applications programs to aid in program verification and testing is not at all new; yet programming language designers seem loath to provide them, at least in useful ways. The Department of Defense language Ada is a case in point.
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The scriptic programming language

1991
Over the last years a vast number of parallel languages have been developed. A large part of these are not available on ‘normal’ computers, or they do not cooperate easily with other languages. This paper describes Scriptic, a parallel language that extends widely used sequential languages (C, C++). Scriptic offers great expressiveness by incorporating
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