C-INTERCAL - significado y definición. Qué es C-INTERCAL
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Qué (quién) es C-INTERCAL - definición

ESOTERIC PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Intercal; InterCal language; InterCal programming language; INTERCAL programming language; InterCal; Abandon all sanity; Compiler Language With No Pronounceable Acronym; CLWNPA; Jim Lyon
  • Don Woods]], one of the authors of INTERCAL, in 2010
  • The "circuitous diagram" from the INTERCAL Reference Manual, purportedly to explain the operation of the "select" operator
  • Jim Lyon, the other author of INTERCAL, in 2005

INTERCAL         
<language, humour> /in't*r-kal/ (Said by the authors to stand for "Compiler Language With No Pronounceable Acronym"). Possibly the most elaborate and long-lived joke in the history of programming languages. It was designed on 1972-05-26 by Don Woods and Jim Lyons at Princeton University. INTERCAL is purposely different from all other computer languages in all ways but one; it is purely a written language, being totally unspeakable. The INTERCAL Reference Manual, describing features of horrifying uniqueness, became an underground classic. An excerpt will make the style of the language clear: It is a well-known and oft-demonstrated fact that a person whose work is incomprehensible is held in high esteem. For example, if one were to state that the simplest way to store a value of 65536 in a 32-bit INTERCAL variable is: DO :1 <- #0$#256 any sensible programmer would say that that was absurd. Since this is indeed the simplest method, the programmer would be made to look foolish in front of his boss, who would of course have happened to turn up, as bosses are wont to do. The effect would be no less devastating for the programmer having been correct. INTERCAL has many other peculiar features designed to make it even more unspeakable. The Woods-Lyons implementation was actually used by many (well, at least several) people at Princeton. Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> wrote C-INTERCAL in 1990 as a break from editing "The New Hacker's Dictionary", adding to it the first implementation of COME FROM under its own name. The compiler has since been maintained and extended by an international community of technomasochists and is consequently enjoying an unprecedented level of unpopularity. The version 0.9 distribution includes the compiler, extensive documentation and a program library. C-INTERCAL is actually an INTERCAL-to-C source translator which then calls the local C compiler to generate a binary. The code is thus quite portable. {intercal/">Intercal Resource Page (http://locke.ccil.org/INTERCALesr/intercal/)}. Usenet newsgroup: news:alt.lang.intercal. ["The INTERCAL Programming Language Reference Manual", Donald R. Woods & James M. Lyon]. [Jargon File] (1997-04-09)
INTERCAL         
The Compiler Language With No Pronounceable Acronym (INTERCAL) is an esoteric programming language that was created as a parody by Don Woods and , two Princeton University students, in 1972. It satirizes aspects of the various programming languages at the time, as well as the proliferation of proposed language constructs and notations in the 1960s.
Č         
  • Pictogram of a Camel
  • Early Etruscan C
  • Early Greek Gamma
LETTER; PART OF CZECH, SLOVAK, LATVIAN, LITHUANIAN, SERBO-CROATIAN LATIN AND OTHER ALPHABETS
C-caron; C with caron; C caron; C wedge
The grapheme Čč (Latin C with caron, also known as háček in Czech, mäkčeň in Slovak, kvačica in Serbo-Croatian, and strešica in Slovene) is used in various contexts, usually denoting the voiceless postalveolar affricate consonant like the English ch in the word chocolate. It is represented in Unicode as U+010C (uppercase Č) and U+010D (lowercase č).

Wikipedia

INTERCAL

The Compiler Language With No Pronounceable Acronym (INTERCAL) is an esoteric programming language that was created as a parody by Don Woods and James M. Lyon, two Princeton University students, in 1972. It satirizes aspects of the various programming languages at the time, as well as the proliferation of proposed language constructs and notations in the 1960s.

There are two maintained implementations of INTERCAL dialects: C-INTERCAL (created in 1990), maintained by Eric S. Raymond and Alex Smith, and CLC-INTERCAL, maintained by Claudio Calvelli.