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ALGOL 68-R

ALGOL 68-R was the first implementation of the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 68.

ALGOL 68R
Original author(s)I. F. Currie, Susan G. Bond, J. D. Morrison
Developer(s)Royal Radar Establishment
Initial releaseJuly 20, 1970; 53 years ago (1970-07-20)
Written inALGOL 60 (original)
ALGOL 68-R (latter)
Operating systemGeorge 3
PlatformICL 1907F
Size34 K words
Available inEnglish
TypeCompiler, translator
LicenseFreeware
Websitesw.ccs.bcs.org/CCs/g3

In December 1968, the report on the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 68 was published. On 20–24 July 1970 a working conference was arranged by the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) to discuss the problems of implementing the language,[1] a small team from the Royal Radar Establishment (RRE) attended to present their compiler, written by I. F. Currie, Susan G. Bond,[2] and J. D. Morrison. In the face of estimates of up to 100 man-years to implement the language, using multi-pass compilers with up to seven passes, they described how they had already implemented a one-pass compiler which was in production for engineering and scientific uses.

The compiler

The ALGOL 68-R compiler was initially written in a local dialect of ALGOL 60 with extensions for address manipulation and list processing. The parser was written using J. M. Foster's Syntax Improving Device (SID) parser generator.

About 20K of this is program, which we feel is too large.
– Currie[3]

The first version of the compiler occupied 34 K words. It was later rewritten in ALGOL 68-R,[4] taking around 36 K words to compile most programs.[5]

ALGOL 68-R was implemented under the George 3 operating system on an ICL 1907F. The compiler was distributed at no charge by International Computers Limited (ICL) on behalf of the Royal Radar Establishment (RRE).

Restrictions in the language compiled

It is a question of morality. We have a Bible and you are sinning!
Mailloux[6]

To allow one pass compiling, ALGOL 68-R implemented a subset of the language defined in the original report:[7]

  1. Identifiers, modes and operators must be specified before use.
  2. No automatic proceduring
  3. Explicit VOID mode
  4. No formal declarers
  5. No parallel processing
  6. GOTO may not be omitted
  7. Uniting is only valid in strong positions

Many of these restrictions were adopted by the revised report on ALGOL 68.

Specification before use

To allow compiling in one pass ALGOL 68-R insisted that all identifiers were specified (declared) before use.

The standard program:

PROC even = (INT number) BOOL: ( number = 0 | TRUE | odd (ABS (number - 1))); PROC odd = (INT number) BOOL: ( number = 0 | FALSE | even (ABS (number - 1))); 

would have to be rewritten as:

PROC (INT) BOOL odd; PROC even = (INT number) BOOL : ( number = 0 | TRUE | odd (ABS (number - 1))); odd := (INT number) BOOL : ( number = 0 | FALSE | even (ABS (number - 1))); 

To allow recursive declarations of modes (types) a special stub mode declaration was used to inform the compiler that an up-coming symbol was a mode rather than an operator:

MODE B; MODE A = STRUCT (REF B b); MODE B = [1:10] REF A; 

No proceduring

In the standard language the proceduring coercion could, in a strong context, convert an expression of some type into a procedure returning that type. This could be used to implement call by name.

Another case where proceduring was used was the declaration of procedures, in the declaration:

PROC x plus 1 = INT : x + 1; 

the right hand side was a cast of x + 1 to integer, which was then converted to procedure returning integer.

The ALGOL 68-R team found this too difficult to handle and made two changes to the language. The proceduring coercion was dropped, and the form mode : expression was redefined as a procedure denotation, casts being indicated by an explicit VAL symbol:

REAL : x CO a cast to REAL in ALGOL 68 CO REAL VAL x CO a cast to REAL in ALGOL 68-R CO 

Code that had a valid use for call by name (for example, Jensen's device) could simply pass a procedure denotation:

 PROC sum = (INT lo, hi, PROC (INT) REAL term) REAL : BEGIN REAL temp := 0; FOR i FROM lo TO hi DO temp +:= term (i); temp END; print (sum (1, 100, (INT i) REAL: 1/i)) 

In the version of the language defined in the revised report these changes were accepted, although the form of the cast was slightly changed to mode (expression).

REAL (x) CO a cast to REAL in revised ALGOL 68 CO 

Explicit void mode

In the original language the VOID mode was represented by an empty mode:

: x := 3.14; CO cast (x := 3.14) to void CO PROC endit = GOTO end; CO a procedure returning void CO 

The ALGOL 68-R team decided to use an explicit VOID symbol in order to simplify parsing (and increase readability):

VOID VAL x := 3.14; CO cast (x := 3.14) to void CO PROC endit = VOID : GOTO end; CO a procedure returning void CO 

This modification to the language was adopted by the ALGOL 68 revised report.

No formal declarers

Formal declarers are the modes on the left hand side of an identity declaration, or the modes specified in a procedure declaration. In the original language, they could include array bounds and specified whether the matching actual declarer was fixed, FLEX or EITHER:

[ 15 ] INT a; CO an actual declarer, bounds 1:15 CO REF [ 3 : ] INT b = a; CO This is an error CO PROC x = (REF [ 1 : EITHER] INT a) : ... 

I think it was a reasonable thing myself to omit the bounds from the formal-declarers but I think it was a terrible crime to omit the EITHER or the FLEX
Lindsey[8]

The ALGOL 68-R team redefined formal declarers to be the same as virtual declarers which include no bound information. They found that this reduced the ambiguities in parsing the language and felt that it was not a feature that would be used in working programs.

If a procedure needed certain bounds for its arguments it could check them itself with the UPB (upper bound) and LWB (lower bound) operators.

In ALGOL 68-R the example above could be recoded like this: (the bounds of a in the procedure would depend on the caller).

[ 15 ] INT a; CO an actual declarer, bounds 1:15 CO REF [] INT b = a [ AT 3]; CO use slice so b has bounds 3:17 CO PROC x = (REF [] INT a) VOID: ... CO bounds given by caller CO 

In the revised report on ALGOL 68 formal bounds were also removed, but the FLEX indication was moved in position so it could be include in formal declarers:

[ 1: FLEX ] INT a; CO original ALGOL 68, or ALGOL 68-R CO FLEX [ 1: ] INT a; CO revised ALGOL 68, CO 
PROC x = (REF [ 1: FLEX ] INT a) : ... CO Original ALGOL 68 CO PROC x = (REF [ ] INT a) VOID: ... CO ALGOL 68-R CO PROC x = (REF FLEX [ ] INT a) VOID: ... CO Revised ALGOL 68 CO 

No parallel processing

In ALGOL 68 code can be run in parallel by writing PAR followed by a collateral clause, for example in:

PAR BEGIN producer, consumer END 

the procedures producer and consumer will be run in parallel. A semaphore type (SEMA) with the traditional P (DOWN) and V (UP) operators is provided for sysynchronizing between the parts of the parallel clause,

This feature was not implemented in ALGOL 68-R.

An extension named ALGOL 68-RT was written which used the subprogramming feature of the ICL 1900 to provide multithreading facilities to ALGOL 68-R programs with semantics similar to modern thread libraries.[9] No changes were made to the compiler, only the runtime library and the linker.

goto may not be omitted

In ALGOL 68 the GOTO symbol could be omitted from a jump:

PROC stop = : ...; ... BEGIN IF x > 3 THEN stop FI; CO a jump, not a call CO ... stop: SKIP END 

As ALGOL 68-R was a one pass compiler this was too difficult, so the GOTO symbol was made obligatory.

The same restriction was made in the official sublanguage, ALGOL 68S.[10]

Uniting is only allowed in strong positions

In ALGOL 68 uniting is the coercion that produces a UNION from a constituent mode, for example:

MODE IBOOL = UNION (INT, BOOL); CO an IBOOL is an INT or a BOOL CO IBOOL a = TRUE; CO the BOOL value TRUE is united to an IBOOL CO 

In standard ALGOL 68 uniting was possible in firm or strong contexts, so for example could be applied to the operands of formulas:

 OP ISTRUE = (IBOOL a) BOOL: ...; IF ISTRUE 1 CO legal because 1 (INT) can be united to IBOOL CO THEN ... 

The ALGOL 68-R implementers found this gave too many ambiguous situations so restricted the uniting coercion to strong contexts.

The effects of this restriction were rarely important and, if necessary, could be worked around by using a cast to provide a strong context at the required point in the program.

F00L

The ALGOL 68-R compiler initialised unused memory to the value -6815700.[11][12]

This value was chosen because:

  • As an integer it was a large negative value
  • As an address it was beyond the maximum address for any practical program on an ICL 1900
  • As an instruction it was illegal
  • As text it displayed as F00L
  • As a floating point number it had the overflow bit set

The same value was used to represent NIL.

Stropping

I notice, in some of your sample programs, that you are not underlining or stropping anything.
Mailloux[13]

In ALGOL family languages, it is necessary to distinguish between identifiers and basic symbols of the language. In printed texts this was usually accomplished by printing basic symbols in boldface or underlined (BEGIN or begin for example).

In source code programs, some stropping technique had to be used. In many ALGOL like languages, before ALGOL 68-R, this was accomplished by enclosing basic symbols in single quote characters ('begin' for example). In 68-R, basic symbols could be distinguished by writing them in upper case, lower case being used for identifiers.

As ALGOL 68-R was implemented on a machine with 6-bit bytes (and hence a 64 character set) this was quite complex and, at least initially, programs had to be composed on paper punched tape using a Friden Flexowriter.

Partly based on the experience of ALGOL 68-R, the revised report on ALGOL 68 specified hardware representations for the language, including UPPER stropping.

Extensions to ALGOL 68

ALGOL 68-R included extensions for separate compiling and low-level access to the machine.

Separate compiling

Since ALGOL 68 is a strongly typed language, the simple library facilities used by other languages on the ICL 1900 system were insufficient. ALGOL 68-R was delivered with its own library format and utilities which allowed sharing of modes, functions, variables, and operators between separately compiled segments of code which could be stored in albums.[14]

A segment to be made available to other segments would end with a list of declarations to be made available:

graphlib CO the segment name CO BEGIN MODE GRAPHDATA = STRUCT ( ... ); MODE GRAPH = REF GRAPHDATA; PROC new graph = ( ... ) GRAPH : ...; PROC draw graph = (GRAPH g) VOID : ...; ... END KEEP GRAPH, new graph, draw graph FINISH 

And then the graph functions could be used by another segment:

myprog WITH graphlib FROM graphalbum BEGIN GRAPH g = new graph (...); ... draw graph (g); ... END FINISH 

Low level system access

As a strongly typed high level language, ALGOL 68 prevents programs from directly accessing the low level hardware. No operators exist for address arithmetic, for example.

Since ALGOL 68-R didn't compile to standard ICL semicompiled (link-ready) format, it was necessary to extend the language to provide features in ALGOL 68-R to write code that would normally be written in assembly language. Machine instructions could be written inline, inside CODE ... EDOC sections and the address manipulation operators INC, DEC, DIF, AS were added.[15]

An example, using a George peri operation to issue a command:

[1 : 120] CHAR buff; INT unitnumber; STRUCT (BITS typemode, reply, INT count, REF CHAR address) control area := (8r47400014,0,120,buff[1]); ...; CODE 0,6/unitnumber; 157,6/typemode OF control area EDOC 

Availability

A copy of the ALGOL 68-R compiler, runnable under the George 3 operating system emulator, by David Holdsworth (University of Leeds), is available, with source code, under a GNU General Public License (GPL).[16]

References

  1. ^ Peck, J.E.L., ed. (1970), Proceedings of the IFIP working conference on ALGOL 68 Implementation, Munich: North-Holland, ISBN 0-7204-2045-8
  2. ^ Bond, Susan; Abbate, Janet (26 September 2001). "Oral-History: Susan Bond: Developing the World's First ALGOL 68 Compiler". Engineering and Technology History Wiki (ETHW). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Retrieved 22 April 2020 – via United Engineering Foundation (UEF).
  3. ^ ALGOL 68 implementation, page 21
  4. ^ Currie, I. F.; Bond, S. G.; Morison, J. D. (1971), "ALGOL 68-R, Its Implementation and Use", Proc IFIP Congress 1971 (Information Processing 1971), Ljubljana, Yugoslavia: North-Holland, pp. 360–363, ISBN 0-7204-2063-6
  5. ^ Anonymous (January 1977). Algol 68-R System – Installation and Maintenance (PDF). Division of Computing and Software Research - Royal Radar Establishment. Retrieved 2011-04-09.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ ALGOL 68 implementation, page 294
  7. ^ ALGOL 68 implementation, pages 21-26
  8. ^ ALGOL 68 implementation, page 276
  9. ^ Oliver, J. R.; Newton, R.S. (1979). "Practical experience with ALGOL 68-RT". The Computer Journal. 22 (2): 114–118. doi:10.1093/comjnl/22.2.114.
  10. ^ Lindsey, Charles H.; van der Meulen, S. G. (1997). "Appendix 4, the sublanguage". informal introduction to ALGOL 68 (revised). north-holland. ISBN 0-7204-0726-5.
  11. ^ Raymond, Eric S. (1996). "fool". The new hacker's dictionary; 3rd edition. MIT Press. p. 200. ISBN 978-0-262-68092-9. The Algol 68-R compiler used to initialize its storage to the character string "F00LF00LF00LF00L..." because as a pointer or as a floating point number it caused a crash, and as an integer or a character string it was very recognizable in a dump.
  12. ^ Algol 68-R System - Installation and Maintenance, page 25
  13. ^ ALGOL 68 implementation, page 30
  14. ^ Woodward, P. M.; Bond, S. G. (1974). "14 - Program segmentation". ALGOL 68-R Users Guide. Her Majesty's Stationery Office (HMSO). pp. 87–89. ISBN 0-11-771600-6.
  15. ^ Algol 68-R System - Installation and Maintenance, pp 26-30
  16. ^ Toal, Graham (September 2018). "George3: Emulation of the ICL 1900". Software Preservation and Machine Emulation. Retrieved 2020-04-19.

External links

  • Algol 68 – Malvern Radar and Technology History Society

algol, first, implementation, algorithmic, language, algol, algol, 68roriginal, author, currie, susan, bond, morrisondeveloper, royal, radar, establishmentinitial, releasejuly, 1970, years, 1970, written, inalgol, original, latter, operating, systemgeorge, 3pl. ALGOL 68 R was the first implementation of the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 68 ALGOL 68ROriginal author s I F Currie Susan G Bond J D MorrisonDeveloper s Royal Radar EstablishmentInitial releaseJuly 20 1970 53 years ago 1970 07 20 Written inALGOL 60 original ALGOL 68 R latter Operating systemGeorge 3PlatformICL 1907FSize34 K wordsAvailable inEnglishTypeCompiler translatorLicenseFreewareWebsitesw wbr ccs wbr bcs wbr org wbr CCs wbr g3In December 1968 the report on the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 68 was published On 20 24 July 1970 a working conference was arranged by the International Federation for Information Processing IFIP to discuss the problems of implementing the language 1 a small team from the Royal Radar Establishment RRE attended to present their compiler written by I F Currie Susan G Bond 2 and J D Morrison In the face of estimates of up to 100 man years to implement the language using multi pass compilers with up to seven passes they described how they had already implemented a one pass compiler which was in production for engineering and scientific uses Contents 1 The compiler 2 Restrictions in the language compiled 2 1 Specification before use 2 2 No proceduring 2 3 Explicit void mode 2 4 No formal declarers 2 5 No parallel processing 2 6 goto may not be omitted 2 7 Uniting is only allowed in strong positions 3 F00L 4 Stropping 5 Extensions to ALGOL 68 5 1 Separate compiling 5 2 Low level system access 6 Availability 7 References 8 External linksThe compiler EditThe ALGOL 68 R compiler was initially written in a local dialect of ALGOL 60 with extensions for address manipulation and list processing The parser was written using J M Foster s Syntax Improving Device SID parser generator About 20K of this is program which we feel is too large Currie 3 The first version of the compiler occupied 34 K words It was later rewritten in ALGOL 68 R 4 taking around 36 K words to compile most programs 5 ALGOL 68 R was implemented under the George 3 operating system on an ICL 1907F The compiler was distributed at no charge by International Computers Limited ICL on behalf of the Royal Radar Establishment RRE Restrictions in the language compiled EditIt is a question of morality We have a Bible and you are sinning Mailloux 6 To allow one pass compiling ALGOL 68 R implemented a subset of the language defined in the original report 7 Identifiers modes and operators must be specified before use No automatic proceduring Explicit VOID mode No formal declarers No parallel processing GOTO may not be omitted Uniting is only valid in strong positionsMany of these restrictions were adopted by the revised report on ALGOL 68 Specification before use Edit To allow compiling in one pass ALGOL 68 R insisted that all identifiers were specified declared before use The standard program PROC even INT number BOOL number 0 TRUE odd ABS number 1 PROC odd INT number BOOL number 0 FALSE even ABS number 1 would have to be rewritten as PROC INT BOOL odd PROC even INT number BOOL number 0 TRUE odd ABS number 1 odd INT number BOOL number 0 FALSE even ABS number 1 To allow recursive declarations of modes types a special stub mode declaration was used to inform the compiler that an up coming symbol was a mode rather than an operator MODE B MODE A STRUCT REF B b MODE B 1 10 REF A No proceduring Edit In the standard language the proceduring coercion could in a strong context convert an expression of some type into a procedure returning that type This could be used to implement call by name Another case where proceduring was used was the declaration of procedures in the declaration PROC x plus 1 INT x 1 the right hand side was a cast of x 1 to integer which was then converted to procedure returning integer The ALGOL 68 R team found this too difficult to handle and made two changes to the language The proceduring coercion was dropped and the form mode expression was redefined as a procedure denotation casts being indicated by an explicit VAL symbol REAL x CO a cast to REAL in ALGOL 68 CO REAL VAL x CO a cast to REAL in ALGOL 68 R CO Code that had a valid use for call by name for example Jensen s device could simply pass a procedure denotation PROC sum INT lo hi PROC INT REAL term REAL BEGIN REAL temp 0 FOR i FROM lo TO hi DO temp term i temp END print sum 1 100 INT i REAL 1 i In the version of the language defined in the revised report these changes were accepted although the form of the cast was slightly changed to mode expression REAL x CO a cast to REAL in revised ALGOL 68 CO Explicit void mode Edit In the original language the VOID mode was represented by an empty mode x 3 14 CO cast x 3 14 to void CO PROC endit GOTO end CO a procedure returning void CO The ALGOL 68 R team decided to use an explicit VOID symbol in order to simplify parsing and increase readability VOID VAL x 3 14 CO cast x 3 14 to void CO PROC endit VOID GOTO end CO a procedure returning void CO This modification to the language was adopted by the ALGOL 68 revised report No formal declarers Edit Formal declarers are the modes on the left hand side of an identity declaration or the modes specified in a procedure declaration In the original language they could include array bounds and specified whether the matching actual declarer was fixed FLEX or EITHER 15 INT a CO an actual declarer bounds 1 15 CO REF 3 INT b a CO This is an error CO PROC x REF 1 EITHER INT a I think it was a reasonable thing myself to omit the bounds from the formal declarers but I think it was a terrible crime to omit the EITHER or the FLEX Lindsey 8 The ALGOL 68 R team redefined formal declarers to be the same as virtual declarers which include no bound information They found that this reduced the ambiguities in parsing the language and felt that it was not a feature that would be used in working programs If a procedure needed certain bounds for its arguments it could check them itself with the UPB upper bound and LWB lower bound operators In ALGOL 68 R the example above could be recoded like this the bounds of a in the procedure would depend on the caller 15 INT a CO an actual declarer bounds 1 15 CO REF INT b a AT 3 CO use slice so b has bounds 3 17 CO PROC x REF INT a VOID CO bounds given by caller CO In the revised report on ALGOL 68 formal bounds were also removed but the FLEX indication was moved in position so it could be include in formal declarers 1 FLEX INT a CO original ALGOL 68 or ALGOL 68 R CO FLEX 1 INT a CO revised ALGOL 68 CO PROC x REF 1 FLEX INT a CO Original ALGOL 68 CO PROC x REF INT a VOID CO ALGOL 68 R CO PROC x REF FLEX INT a VOID CO Revised ALGOL 68 CO No parallel processing Edit In ALGOL 68 code can be run in parallel by writing PAR followed by a collateral clause for example in PAR BEGIN producer consumer END the procedures producer and consumer will be run in parallel A semaphore type SEMA with the traditional P DOWN and V UP operators is provided for sysynchronizing between the parts of the parallel clause This feature was not implemented in ALGOL 68 R An extension named ALGOL 68 RT was written which used the subprogramming feature of the ICL 1900 to provide multithreading facilities to ALGOL 68 R programs with semantics similar to modern thread libraries 9 No changes were made to the compiler only the runtime library and the linker goto may not be omitted Edit In ALGOL 68 the GOTO symbol could be omitted from a jump PROC stop BEGIN IF x gt 3 THEN stop FI CO a jump not a call CO stop SKIP END As ALGOL 68 R was a one pass compiler this was too difficult so the GOTO symbol was made obligatory The same restriction was made in the official sublanguage ALGOL 68S 10 Uniting is only allowed in strong positions Edit In ALGOL 68 uniting is the coercion that produces a UNION from a constituent mode for example MODE IBOOL UNION INT BOOL CO an IBOOL is an INT or a BOOL CO IBOOL a TRUE CO the BOOL value TRUE is united to an IBOOL CO In standard ALGOL 68 uniting was possible in firm or strong contexts so for example could be applied to the operands of formulas OP ISTRUE IBOOL a BOOL IF ISTRUE 1 CO legal because 1 INT can be united to IBOOL CO THEN The ALGOL 68 R implementers found this gave too many ambiguous situations so restricted the uniting coercion to strong contexts The effects of this restriction were rarely important and if necessary could be worked around by using a cast to provide a strong context at the required point in the program F00L EditThe ALGOL 68 R compiler initialised unused memory to the value 6815700 11 12 This value was chosen because As an integer it was a large negative value As an address it was beyond the maximum address for any practical program on an ICL 1900 As an instruction it was illegal As text it displayed as F00L As a floating point number it had the overflow bit setThe same value was used to represent NIL Stropping EditI notice in some of your sample programs that you are not underlining or stropping anything Mailloux 13 In ALGOL family languages it is necessary to distinguish between identifiers and basic symbols of the language In printed texts this was usually accomplished by printing basic symbols in boldface or underlined BEGIN or begin for example In source code programs some stropping technique had to be used In many ALGOL like languages before ALGOL 68 R this was accomplished by enclosing basic symbols in single quote characters begin for example In 68 R basic symbols could be distinguished by writing them in upper case lower case being used for identifiers As ALGOL 68 R was implemented on a machine with 6 bit bytes and hence a 64 character set this was quite complex and at least initially programs had to be composed on paper punched tape using a Friden Flexowriter Partly based on the experience of ALGOL 68 R the revised report on ALGOL 68 specified hardware representations for the language including UPPER stropping Extensions to ALGOL 68 EditALGOL 68 R included extensions for separate compiling and low level access to the machine Separate compiling Edit Since ALGOL 68 is a strongly typed language the simple library facilities used by other languages on the ICL 1900 system were insufficient ALGOL 68 R was delivered with its own library format and utilities which allowed sharing of modes functions variables and operators between separately compiled segments of code which could be stored in albums 14 A segment to be made available to other segments would end with a list of declarations to be made available graphlib CO the segment name CO BEGIN MODE GRAPHDATA STRUCT MODE GRAPH REF GRAPHDATA PROC new graph GRAPH PROC draw graph GRAPH g VOID END KEEP GRAPH new graph draw graph FINISH And then the graph functions could be used by another segment myprog WITH graphlib FROM graphalbum BEGIN GRAPH g new graph draw graph g END FINISH Low level system access Edit As a strongly typed high level language ALGOL 68 prevents programs from directly accessing the low level hardware No operators exist for address arithmetic for example Since ALGOL 68 R didn t compile to standard ICL semicompiled link ready format it was necessary to extend the language to provide features in ALGOL 68 R to write code that would normally be written in assembly language Machine instructions could be written inline inside CODE EDOC sections and the address manipulation operators INC DEC DIF AS were added 15 An example using a George peri operation to issue a command 1 120 CHAR buff INT unitnumber STRUCT BITS typemode reply INT count REF CHAR address control area 8r47400014 0 120 buff 1 CODE 0 6 unitnumber 157 6 typemode OF control area EDOCAvailability EditA copy of the ALGOL 68 R compiler runnable under the George 3 operating system emulator by David Holdsworth University of Leeds is available with source code under a GNU General Public License GPL 16 References Edit Peck J E L ed 1970 Proceedings of the IFIP working conference on ALGOL 68 Implementation Munich North Holland ISBN 0 7204 2045 8 Bond Susan Abbate Janet 26 September 2001 Oral History Susan Bond Developing the World s First ALGOL 68 Compiler Engineering and Technology History Wiki ETHW Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE Retrieved 22 April 2020 via United Engineering Foundation UEF ALGOL 68 implementation page 21 Currie I F Bond S G Morison J D 1971 ALGOL 68 R Its Implementation and Use Proc IFIP Congress 1971 Information Processing 1971 Ljubljana Yugoslavia North Holland pp 360 363 ISBN 0 7204 2063 6 Anonymous January 1977 Algol 68 R System Installation and Maintenance PDF Division of Computing and Software Research Royal Radar Establishment Retrieved 2011 04 09 permanent dead link ALGOL 68 implementation page 294 ALGOL 68 implementation pages 21 26 ALGOL 68 implementation page 276 Oliver J R Newton R S 1979 Practical experience with ALGOL 68 RT The Computer Journal 22 2 114 118 doi 10 1093 comjnl 22 2 114 Lindsey Charles H van der Meulen S G 1997 Appendix 4 the sublanguage informal introduction to ALGOL 68 revised north holland ISBN 0 7204 0726 5 Raymond Eric S 1996 fool The new hacker s dictionary 3rd edition MIT Press p 200 ISBN 978 0 262 68092 9 The Algol 68 R compiler used to initialize its storage to the character string F00LF00LF00LF00L because as a pointer or as a floating point number it caused a crash and as an integer or a character string it was very recognizable in a dump Algol 68 R System Installation and Maintenance page 25 ALGOL 68 implementation page 30 Woodward P M Bond S G 1974 14 Program segmentation ALGOL 68 R Users Guide Her Majesty s Stationery Office HMSO pp 87 89 ISBN 0 11 771600 6 Algol 68 R System Installation and Maintenance pp 26 30 Toal Graham September 2018 George3 Emulation of the ICL 1900 Software Preservation and Machine Emulation Retrieved 2020 04 19 External links EditAlgol 68 Malvern Radar and Technology History Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ALGOL 68 R amp oldid 1157847808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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