Basic Assembly Language - Definition. Was ist Basic Assembly Language
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Was (wer) ist Basic Assembly Language - definition

ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE FOR IBM SYSTEM/360 AND SUCCESSOR MAINFRAMES
Basic assembly language; Assembly (System 360); IBM Basic assembly language; IBM Basic assembly language and successors

Basic Assembly Language         
(BAL) What most people called IBM 360 assembly language. See ALC. (1995-04-13)
IBM Basic Assembly Language and successors         
Basic Assembly Language (BAL) is the commonly used term for a low-level programming language used on IBM System/360 and successor mainframes. Originally, "Basic Assembly Language" applied only to an extremely restricted dialect designed to run under control of IBM Basic Programming Support (BPS/360) on systems with only 8 KB of main memory, and only a card reader, a card punch, and a printer for input/output — thus the word "Basic".
assembly code         
ANY LOW-LEVEL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE IN WHICH THERE IS A VERY STRONG CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN THE INSTRUCTIONS IN THE LANGUAGE AND THE ARCHITECTURE'S MACHINE CODE INSTRUCTIONS
Programming language/assembly; Cross assembler; Assembler program; Assembler code; Assembly code; Assembly Language; Assembler programming; Assembly programming language; Conditional assembly language; Assembly languages; Assembler language; Assembly programming; Assembly Programming System; Assembly time; Assembler directive; Macro assembler; Assembly language assembler; Assembler (computer programming); Assembler for an assembly language; Macroassembler; Symbolic Machine Code; Meta-assembler; Assembler (computing); ARM Assembly Language Programming; Assembly language macros; Assembly file; Two-pass assembler; Assember language; Cross-assembler; Symbolic machine code; Mnemonic (assembly language); Opcode mnemonics; Extended mnemonics; Mnemonics (assembler); Mnemonics (assembly language); Mnemonic (assembler); Assembler (programming language); Op code mnemonic

Wikipedia

IBM Basic Assembly Language and successors

Basic Assembly Language (BAL) is the commonly used term for a low-level programming language used on IBM System/360 and successor mainframes. Originally, "Basic Assembly Language" applied only to an extremely restricted dialect designed to run under control of IBM Basic Programming Support (BPS/360) on systems with only 8 KB of main memory, and only a card reader, a card punch, and a printer for input/output — thus the word "Basic". However, the full name and the initialism "BAL" almost immediately attached themselves in popular use to all assembly-language dialects on the System/360 and its descendants. BAL for BPS/360 was introduced with the System/360 in 1964.

Assemblers on other System/360 operating systems through System/370, System/390, and System z, as well as the UNIVAC Series 90 mainframes made by Sperry Corporation, and the BS2000 Mainframes currently made by Fujitsu, inherited and extended its syntax. The latest derived language is known as the IBM High-Level Assembler (HLASM). Programmers utilizing this family of assemblers also refer to them as ALC, (for Assembly Language Coding), or simply "assembler".