[SCC_Active_Members] Misc. resources of potential interest

Van Snyder van.snyder at jpl.nasa.gov
Mon Feb 5 11:25:32 PST 2007


Algol W (Reaction by Wirth and Hoare to Algol 68's complexity -- led to
Pascal)
APT (Automatically Programmed Tools)
BAL (IBM 360 assembler)
Co-Array Fortran
Concurrent Pascal (by Per Brinch Hansen)
F-- (Became Co-Array Fortran)
Fortran M (A parallel dialect)
HPF (High Performance Fortran)
IBMAP (IBM 7090/7094 assembler)
ID (Dataflow language from MIT LCS -- Arvind et. al.)
Linda (C-Linda, Fortran-Linda, etc.)
LRLTran (Lawrence Radiation Lab Fortran)
MIX (from Knuth's "The Art of Computer Programming)
pH (Parallel Haskell, includes features from ID)
PLIX (Outgrowth of PL/.9; IBM uses it for compiler writing)
Pop (Is this the same as Pop-11?)
QuickTran (Interactive Fortran for IBM 7040)
S-Fortran (Structured Fortran, from Caine, Farber and Gordon)
SFtran (Structured Fortran, from JPL)
Soap (an IBM 704/709 assembler)

Are Diana and CLI languages?

-- 
Van Snyder                    |  What fraction of Americans believe 
Van.Snyder at jpl.nasa.gov       |  Wrestling is real and NASA is fake?
Any alleged opinions are my own and have not been approved or
disapproved by JPL, CalTech, NASA, the President, or anybody else.

On Sat, 2007-02-03 at 15:46 +0000, skyvis at skyvis.best.vwh.net wrote:
>   Not a bad first attempt at list, but I can think of many that are missing,
> off top of head: CT (commerical translator), 9PAC, Autocode (may forms),
> Fargo, AHPL, Fortransit, PACT. If they are including SED in there they
> should include TECO. 

Autocode is there today.

> Rich
> 
> > While roaming the WWW looking for stuff about SNOBOL and its family members,
> > I encountered the following resources that might interest other SPG members.
> > 	===========================================
> > 
> > Alphabetical list of programming languages by Scriptol.org
> > <http://www.scriptol.org>  at
> > http://www.scriptol.org/alphabetical-programming-language-list.html
> > 
> > 
> > The list of programming languages is comprised of all programming languages
> > with a compiler or an interpreter, in alphabetical order. It is a
> > replacement for the list of wikis, that are built with arbitrary criteria by
> > anyone that visits their websites, and that are not really serious.  In
> > addition, historical languages with no compiler, but that may have
> > influenced design of further work are included also, provided that the
> > author of the further language has made a verifiable reference to them.
> > 
> > This page may be printed and copied without any restriction. The information
> > contained on this page may be used freely but the page itself should not be
> > put on another website to avoid duplicate content. See authorization
> > <http://www.scriptol.org/alphabetical-programming-language-list.html#noindex
> > > .
> > 
> > Each entry in the list has a link to a website or a download page for the
> > compiler or the interpreter. For historical languages, a link to a dedicated
> > website or a description. Additional info as date and type of language may
> > be added too.
> > 
> > *	Programming languages
> > <http://www.scriptol.org/alphabetical-programming-language-list.html#languag
> > e-a>  
> > *	Markup languages and data formats
> > <http://www.scriptol.org/alphabetical-programming-language-list.html#markup-
> > language> 
> > *	Database-oriented or query languages
> > <http://www.scriptol.org/alphabetical-programming-language-list.html#query-l
> > anguage> 
> 



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