COWSEL
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (March 2024) |
Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: structured, reflective, procedural |
---|---|
Family | Lisp: POP |
Designed by | Robin Popplestone, Rod Burstall |
Developers | University of Leeds, Bradford Institute of Technology, University of Edinburgh |
First appeared | 1964 |
Typing discipline | dynamic |
Implementation language | assembly |
Platform | Ferranti Pegasus, Stantec Zebra, Elliot 4120 |
License | Proprietary |
Influenced by | |
CPL, Lisp | |
Influenced | |
POP-2 |
COWSEL (COntrolled Working SpacE Language) is a programming language designed between 1964 and 1966 by Robin Popplestone. It was based on an reverse Polish notation (RPN) form of the language Lisp, combined with some ideas from Combined Programming Language (CPL).
COWSEL was initially implemented on a Ferranti Pegasus computer at the University of Leeds and on a Stantec Zebra at the Bradford Institute of Technology. Later, Rod Burstall implemented it on an Elliot 4120 at the University of Edinburgh.
COWSEL was renamed POP-1 in 1966, during summer, and development continued under that name from then on.
Example code[edit]
function member lambda x y comment Is x a member of list y; define y atom then *0 end y hd x equal then *1 end y tl -> y repeat up
Reserved words (keywords) were also underlined in the original printouts. Popplestone performed syntax highlighting by using underscoring on a Friden Flexowriter.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- Technical report: EPU-R-12, U Edinburgh (Apr 1966)
External links[edit]