SLANG

1. R.A. Sibley. CACM 4(1):75-84 (Jan 1961).

2. Set LANGuage. Jastrzebowski, ca 1990. C extension with set-theoretic data types and garbage collection. "The SLANG Programming Language Reference Manual, Version 3.3", W. Jastrzebowski <[email protected]>, 1990.

3. Structured LANGuage. Michael Kessler, IBM. A language based on structured programming macros for IBM 370 assembly language. "Project RMAG: SLANG (Structured Language) Compiler", R.A. Magnuson, NIH-DCRT-DMB-SSS-UG105, NIH, DHEW, Bethesda, MD 20205 (1980).

4. "SLANG: A Problem Solving Language for Continuous-Model Simulation and Optimisation", J.M. Thames, Proc 24th ACM Natl Conf 1969.

S-Lang

<language>

A small but highly functional embedded interpreter. S-Lang was a stack-based postfix language resembling Forth and BC/DC with limited support for infix notation. Now it has a C-like infix syntax. Arrays, stings, integers, floating-point and autoloading are all suported. The editor JED embeds S-lang.

S-Lang is available under the GNU Library General Public License. It runs on MS-DOS, Unix, and VMS.

ftp://amy.tch.harvard.edu/.

E-mail: John E. Davis <[email protected]>.

Last updated: 2000-10-30

Nearby terms:

slackslackwareSLAMSLANGS-Langslap on the sideslashslashdot effect

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