Tiny Basic Interpreter Language - definitie. Wat is Tiny Basic Interpreter Language
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Wat (wie) is Tiny Basic Interpreter Language - definitie

DIALECT OF THE BASIC PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Tiny BASIC programming language; Tiny Basic; Tiny basic software; TinyBASIC; Tinybasic; Palo Alto Tiny BASIC; Palo Alto TinyBASIC
  • A paper tape containing the expanded 8K version of Microsoft BASIC
  • The use of "Copyleft; All Wrongs Reserved" in 1976<ref name="issue1976"/>

Tiny Basic Interpreter Language      
<language> (TBIL) The inner interpreter of Tom Pittman's set of Tiny Basics in Dr Dobb's Journal. (1997-09-12)
IBM Basic Assembly Language and successors         
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) 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".
Basic Assembly Language         
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
(BAL) What most people called IBM 360 assembly language. See ALC. (1995-04-13)

Wikipedia

Tiny BASIC

Tiny BASIC is a family of dialects of the BASIC programming language that can fit into 4 or fewer KBs of memory. Tiny BASIC was designed in response to the open letter published by Bill Gates complaining about users pirating Altair BASIC, which sold for $150. Tiny BASIC was intended to be a completely free version of BASIC that would run on the same early microcomputers.

Tiny BASIC was released as a specification, not an implementation, published in the September 1975 issue of the People's Computer Company (PCC) newsletter. The article invited programmers to implement it on their machines and send the resulting assembler language implementation back for inclusion in a series of three planned newsletters. Li-Chen Wang, author of Palo Alto Tiny BASIC, coined the term "copyleft" to describe this concept. The community response was so overwhelming that the newsletter was relaunched as Dr. Dobb's Journal, the first regular periodical to focus on microcomputer software. Dr. Dobb's lasted in print form for 34 years and then online until 2014, when its website became a static archive.

The small size and free source code made these implementations invaluable in the early days of microcomputers in the mid-1970s, when RAM was expensive and typical memory size was only 4 to 8 KB. While the minimal version of Microsoft's Altair BASIC would also run in 4 KB machines, it left only 790 bytes free for BASIC programs. More free space was a significant advantage of Tiny BASIC. To meet these strict size limits, Tiny BASIC dialects generally lacked a variety of features commonly found in other dialects, for instance, most versions lacked string variables, lacked floating-point math, and allowed only single-letter variable names.

Tiny BASIC implementations are still used today, for programming microcontrollers such as the Arduino.