Autocode - определение. Что такое Autocode
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Что (кто) такое Autocode - определение

EARLY PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES
Mark 1 Autocode; Mercury Autocode; Mark I Autocode; Mercury (autocode); AUTOCODE; PEGASUS AUTOCODE; MERCURY AUTOCODE; MARK 1 AUTOCODE; Pegasus Autocode; Titan Autocode
Найдено результатов: 8
Autocode         
<language> 1. The assembly language accepted by AUTOCODER. 2. A generic term for symbolic assembly language. Versions of Autocode were developed for Ferranti Atlas, Titan, Mercury and Pegasus and IBM 702 and IBM 705. (2001-05-14)
Autocode         
Autocode is the name of a family of "simplified coding systems", later called programming languages, devised in the 1950s and 1960s for a series of digital computers at the Universities of Manchester, Cambridge and London. Autocode was a generic term; the autocodes for different machines were not necessarily closely related as are, for example, the different versions of the single language Fortran.
Mercury Autocode         
Autocode for the Ferranti Mercury machine.
Atlas Autocode         
VARIANT OF THE ALGOL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Atlas Autocode programming language; ATLAS Autocode

Atlas Autocode (AA) is a programming language developed around 1965 at the University of Manchester. A variant of the language ALGOL, it was developed by Tony Brooker and Derrick Morris for the Atlas computer.

The word Autocode was basically an early term for programming language. Different autocodes could vary greatly.

Atlas Autocode         
VARIANT OF THE ALGOL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Atlas Autocode programming language; ATLAS Autocode
<language> The Autocode for the Ferranti Atlas, which may have been the first commercial computer with hardware-paged virtual memory. Whereas other autocodes were basically assembly languages, Atlas Autocode was high-level and block-structured, resembling a cross between Fortran and ALGOL 60. It had call-by value, loops, declarations, complex numbers, pointers, heap and stack storage generators, dynamic arrays, and extensible syntax. (2000-04-03)
Autocoding         
Autocoding refers to software solutions that help manufacturers, particularly those in the food industry, ensure that products have the correct packaging and correct 'sell by' date codes, thereby reducing the number of Emergency Product Withdrawals (EPW). The term was first used during an initiative between Geest PLC (acquired by Bakkavör in 2005 BBC News 2005 Story on acquisition) and Tesco in 2001.
Manchester Autocode      
<language, history> The predecessor of Mercury Autocode. ["The Programming Strategy Used with the Manchester University Mark I Computer", R.A. Brooker, Proc IEE 103B Suppl:151-157, 1956]. (2000-10-02)
IMProved Mercury autocode      
<language> (IMP) A version of Autocode used to program the Edinburgh Multi Access System (EMAS), one of the first operating systems written in a high-level language, apparently predating Unix. Luis Damas' Prolog interpreter in IMP for EMAS led to C-Prolog. [Papers in J. British Computer Society]. (1996-04-07)

Википедия

Autocode

Autocode is the name of a family of "simplified coding systems", later called programming languages, devised in the 1950s and 1960s for a series of digital computers at the Universities of Manchester, Cambridge and London. Autocode was a generic term; the autocodes for different machines were not necessarily closely related as are, for example, the different versions of the single language Fortran.

Today the term is used to refer to the family of early languages descended from the Manchester Mark 1 autocoder systems, which were generally similar. In the 1960s, the term autocoders was used more generically as to refer to any high-level programming language using a compiler. Examples of languages referred to as autocodes are COBOL and Fortran.