Pop-11 - определение. Что такое Pop-11
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Что (кто) такое Pop-11 - определение

REFLECTIVE, INCREMENTALLY COMPILED PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Pop11; POP11
Найдено результатов: 3202
Pop-11         
<language> A programming language created by Robin Popplestone in 1975, originally for the PDP-11. Pop-11 is stack-oriented, extensible, and efficient like FORTH. It is also functional, dynamically typed, interactive, with garbage collection like LISP, and the syntax is {block structured} like Pascal. ["Programming in POP-11", J. Laventhol <jcl@deshaw.com>, Blackwell 1987]. AlphaPop is an implementation for the Macintosh from Computable Functions Inc. PopTalk and POPLOG from the University of Sussex are available for VAX/VMS and most workstations. E-mail: Robin Popplestone <pop@cs.umass.edu> (2003-03-25)
POP-11         
POP-11 is a reflective, incrementally compiled programming language with many of the features of an interpreted language. It is the core language of the Poplog programming environment developed originally by the University of Sussex, and recently in the School of Computer Science at the University of Birmingham, which hosts the main Poplog website.
POP         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
1. <language> A family of programming languages, POP-1, POP-2, POP-10, Pop-11, POP++, POP-9X, POPLOG. 2. Post Office Protocol. See also pop, PoP. [Jargon File] (1996-02-18)
POP         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
Point Of Presence (Reference: Internet, ISP)
Pop         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
·noun The European redwing.
II. Pop ·adv Like a pop; suddenly; unexpectedly.
III. Pop ·noun A small, sharp, quick explosive sound or report; as, to go off with a pop.
IV. Pop ·vi To burst open with a pop, when heated over a fire; as, this corn pops well.
V. Pop ·vi To make a pop, or sharp, quick sound; as, the muskets popped away on all sides.
VI. Pop ·vt To cause to pop; to cause to burst open by heat, as grains of Indian corn; as, to pop corn or chestnuts.
VII. Pop ·noun An unintoxicating beverage which expels the cork with a pop from the bottle containing it; as, ginger pop; lemon pop, ·etc.
VIII. Pop ·vt To thrust or push suddenly; to offer suddenly; to bring suddenly and unexpectedly to notice; as, to pop one's head in at the door.
IX. Pop ·vi To enter, or issue forth, with a quick, sudden movement; to move from place to place suddenly; to Dart;
- with in, out, upon, off, ·etc.
POP         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
¦ abbreviation
1. (also PoP) Computing point of presence, denoting equipment that acts as access to the Internet.
2. (in the UK) Post Office Preferred, used to specify the size of envelopes and other items.
3. Computing Post Office Protocol, a standard protocol for accessing email.
pop         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
1) another word for soda
2) British slang for champagne.
We'll have another bottle of pop off the good Mottram and be off to the old-hundreth.(from Brideshead Revisited by E. Waugh)
3) meaning to attempt something
You want this website done by 3am? I'll have a pop but I can't promise anything!
pop         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
(pops, popping, popped)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
Pop is modern music that usually has a strong rhythm and uses electronic equipment.
...the perfect combination of Caribbean rhythms, European pop, and American soul...
...a life-size poster of a pop star...
I know nothing about pop music.
N-UNCOUNT: oft N n
2.
You can refer to fizzy drinks such as lemonade as pop. (mainly BRIT INFORMAL; in AM, usually use soda pop
)
He still visits the village shop for buns and fizzy pop.
...glass pop bottles.
N-UNCOUNT
3.
Pop is used to represent a short sharp sound, for example the sound made by bursting a balloon or by pulling a cork out of a bottle.
His back tyre just went pop on a motorway.
N-COUNT; SOUND
4.
If something pops, it makes a short sharp sound.
He untwisted the wire off the champagne bottle, and the cork popped and shot to the ceiling.
VERB: V
5.
If your eyes pop, you look very surprised or excited when you see something. (INFORMAL)
My eyes popped at the sight of the rich variety of food on show.
VERB: V
6.
If you pop something somewhere, you put it there quickly. (BRIT INFORMAL)
He plucked a purple grape from the bunch and popped it in his mouth.
VERB: V n prep/adv
7.
If you pop somewhere, you go there for a short time. (BRIT INFORMAL)
Wendy popped in for a quick bite to eat on Monday night.
VERB: V adv/prep
8.
Some people call their father pop. (mainly AM INFORMAL; in BRIT, usually use dad
)
I looked at Pop and he had big tears in his eyes...
N-FAMILY
9.
to pop the question: see question
POP         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)
Package for Online Programming
PoP         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
POP; PoP; Pop (TV Channel); Pop (disambiguation); Pop Television Channel; POP (TV); PoP (television channel); POP (television channel); Pop (television); Pop (television channel); Pop (TV); P O P; Pop! (disambiguation); PoP (disambiguation); Pop (album); Pop (TV channel); Pop (magazine); Pop (TV network); POP (TV network); Pop! (song); Pop (song)

Википедия

POP-11

POP-11 is a reflective, incrementally compiled programming language with many of the features of an interpreted language. It is the core language of the Poplog programming environment developed originally by the University of Sussex, and recently in the School of Computer Science at the University of Birmingham, which hosts the main Poplog website.

POP-11 is an evolution of the language POP-2, developed in Edinburgh University, and features an open stack model (like Forth, among others). It is mainly procedural, but supports declarative language constructs, including a pattern matcher, and is mostly used for research and teaching in artificial intelligence, although it has features sufficient for many other classes of problems. It is often used to introduce symbolic programming techniques to programmers of more conventional languages like Pascal, who find POP syntax more familiar than that of Lisp. One of POP-11's features is that it supports first-class functions.

POP-11 is the core language of the Poplog system. The availability of the compiler and compiler subroutines at run-time (a requirement for incremental compilation) gives it the ability to support a far wider range of extensions (including run-time extensions, such as adding new data-types) than would be possible using only a macro facility. This made it possible for (optional) incremental compilers to be added for Prolog, Common Lisp and Standard ML, which could be added as required to support either mixed language development or development in the second language without using any POP-11 constructs. This made it possible for Poplog to be used by teachers, researchers, and developers who were interested in only one of the languages. The most successful product developed in POP-11 was the Clementine Data-mining system, developed by ISL. After SPSS bought ISL they decided to port Clementine to C++ and Java, and eventually succeeded with great effort (and perhaps some loss of the flexibility provided by the use of an AI language).

POP-11 was for a time available only as part of an expensive commercial package (Poplog), but since about 1999 it has been freely available as part of the Open Source version of Poplog, including various additional packages and teaching libraries. An online version of ELIZA using POP-11 is available at Birmingham.

At the University of Sussex, David Young used POP-11 in combination with C and Fortran to develop a suite of teaching and interactive development tools for image processing and vision, and has made them available in the Popvision extension to Poplog.