CS-4 (programming language)
CS-4[1] | |
---|---|
Designed by | Intermetrics, Inc. |
Developer | Intermetrics |
First appeared | 26 December 1973[2] |
Typing discipline | unknown |
Influenced by | |
unknown | |
Influenced | |
Praxis (programming language)[3] |
CS-4[1] is a programming language and an operating system interface. It was developed in the early 1970s at Intermetrics in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The first published manual was released in
December, 1973, which is entitled "CS-4 Language Reference Manual and Operating System Interface";[1] the document had three parts: CS-4 Base Language Capabilities; CS-4 Operating System Interface; and Overview of
Full CS-4 Capabilities.
History
Little is known about the CS-4 language, but it was developed for the United States Navy in the 1970s, and was an ongoing research project, which was continuing the study of extensibility and abstraction techniques to develop a requirement of the language to be simple and compact.[4] The language was first documented in 1973 by Miller et. al,[4] and was revised in 1975 to allow "data abstractions and more powerful extension facilities"[4]
Descendants
- Praxis (programming language) explicitly refers to CS-4 as a predecessor language.[3]
References
- ^ a b c Benjamin M. Brosgol; ,Timothy A.; James L. Felty; Joel R. Lexier; Gary M. Palter. DTIC Report Entry. INTERMETRICS INC.
- ^ Library of Congress. Copyright Office; Copyright Office. Catalog of Copyright Entries. Library of Congress.
- ^ a b An introduction to Praxis.
- ^ a b c Timothy A. Dreisbach; James L. Felty; Ira Greenberg. Higher-order Language Technology Evaluation (PDF). Intermetrics Inc.