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PL360 (or PL/360) is a system programming language designed by Niklaus Wirth and written by Wirth, Joseph W. Wells Jr., and Edwin Satterthwaite Jr. for
PL360
Class of computer programming languages
ESPOL on Burroughs mainframes in about 1960, followed by Niklaus Wirth's PL360 (first written on a Burroughs system as a cross compiler), which had the
System_programming_language
Pipelines Pizza PL-11 PL/0 PL/B PL/C PL/I – ISO 6160 PL/M PL/P PL/S PL/SQL PL360 PLANC Plankalkül Planner PLEX PLEXIL Plus Pony POP-11 POP-2 PostScript PortablE
List_of_programming_languages
instructions.[disputed – discuss] This was followed by Niklaus Wirth's PL360 in 1968; this replicated the Burroughs facilities, with which he was familiar
High-level_assembler
Programming language close to hardware
languages have been developed such as: MOL940 for the SDS 940; MOL-360, PL360, and PL/S for the IBM System/360 line, and its successors; ESPOL and NEWP
Low-level programming language
Low-level_programming_language
Programming language based on a proposal for ALGOL X
University that was widely distributed. The implementation was written in PL360, an ALGOL-like assembly language designed by Wirth. The implementation includes
ALGOL_W
Swiss computer scientist (1934–2024)
Wirth was the chief designer of the programming languages Euler (1965), PL360 (1966), ALGOL W (1966), Pascal (1970), Modula (1975), Modula-2 (1978), Oberon
Niklaus_Wirth
List of programming languages types and the languages that meet its description
Object Pascal (umbrella name for Delphi, Free Pascal, Oxygene, others) PL360 These are languages based on or that operate on XML. Ant Cω ECMAScript for
List of programming languages by type
List_of_programming_languages_by_type
Programming language by Hewlett-Packard
mainframe systems, which also influenced a number of 1960s languages like PL360 and JOVIAL. Through the mid-1970s, the success of the HP systems produced
Systems_Programming_Language
Programming language for the PDP-11
by R.D. Russell of CERN in 1971. Written in Fortran IV, it is similar to PL360 and is cross-compiled on other machines. PL-11 was originally developed
PL-11
Brooker, Derrick Morris at Manchester University ALGOL 60, Autocode 1965 PL360 (concept) Niklaus Wirth ALGOL 60, ESPOL 1966 JOSS II Chuck Baker, RAND JOSS
Timeline of programming languages
Timeline_of_programming_languages
System programming language
adding structured programming to the PDP-11 assembly language. LIL resembled PL360 with C-like flow control syntax. The LIL compiler "lc" was part of Fifth
Little Implementation Language
Little_Implementation_Language
Class of bottom-up parsing methods
precedence parser, uses one large MxN table to find right and left ends. Used in PL360. Does not handle common programming languages. Weak precedence parser, uses
Shift-reduce_parser
Mainframe operating system
Michigan Computing Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan Wirth, Niklaus (1968). "PL360, a Programming Language for the 360 Computers". Journal of the ACM. 15:
Michigan_Terminal_System
Dialect of the PL/I programming language
generalization of the simple precedence parser method invented by Niklaus Wirth for PL360. Simple precedence is itself a generalization of the trivially simple operator
XPL
Proprietary IBM systems programming language
were deleted to hide their true origin and ownership.[citation needed] PL360 High-level assembler BSL Language Specifications, International Business
IBM_PL/S
Computer made by the French company CII
Symbol assembler, Metasymbol, a meta-assembler LP70, a language similar to PL360 COBOL Fortran IV extended BASIC Algol 60 PL/I Pascal Simula 67 SNOBOL Lisp—Several
CII_Iris_80
Database management system developed by Stanford University
needs of a large and diverse computing community. SPIRES was rewritten in PL360, a block structured programming language designed explicitly for System/360-compatible
Stanford Physics Information Retrieval System
Stanford_Physics_Information_Retrieval_System
PL360
PL360
PL360
PL360
Girl/Female
Tamil
Younger sister
Girl/Female
Indian
Goddess Parvati, Purity, Gift from God, One who protects, Night prayer
Boy/Male
Irish
From dubh “â€blackâ€â€ and lan “â€blade, swordâ€â€ means “â€black sword.â€â€ Dubhlainn loved the fairy queen and legendary harpist Aoibhell who gave him her cloak of invisibility to wear in battle.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Beautiful
Girl/Female
Australian, British, English
Believe
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of numerous places named from Old English cotum (dative plural of cot) ‘at the cottages or huts’ (or sometimes possibly from a Middle English plural, coten). Examples include Coton (Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Staffordshire), Cottam (East Yorkshire, Lancashire, Nottinghamshire), and Cotham (Nottinghamshire).French : from a diminutive of Old French cot(t)e ‘coat (of mail)’ (see Cott).John Cotton (1584–1652) was a noted Puritan preacher, who landed at Boston, MA, from London in 1633 and became leader of the Congregationalists in America.
Girl/Female
Indian, Sanskrit
Consisting in All; Al-containing
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit
Soham; God
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Being without Attachment
Girl/Female
Irish
Irish version of the Norman Alice or Alicia from Elizabeth “God is my oath.â€
PL360
PL360
PL360
PL360
PL360