Difference between revisions of "Pascal"

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m (External links: BWK on his dislike of Pascal)
(External links: +Experience with Pascal Compilers on Mini-computers)
 
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== Compilers ==
 
== Compilers ==
  
*Turbo Pascal
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* Turbo Pascal
 
 
==Notes==
 
The old Turbo Pascal 5.5 is now freely available [http://edn.embarcadero.com/article/20803 here].
 
  
 
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* [https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~bwk/btl.mirror/notfavorite.html Why Pascal is Not My Favorite Programming Language] - some pithy comments from Brian Kernighan
 
* [https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~bwk/btl.mirror/notfavorite.html Why Pascal is Not My Favorite Programming Language] - some pithy comments from Brian Kernighan
 +
* [https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/956641.956642 Experience with Pascal Compilers on Mini-computers]
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* [https://community.embarcadero.com/article/technical-articles/162-programming/7127-antique-software-turbo-pascal-v55 Antique Software: Turbo Pascal Version 5.5] - The old Turbo Pascal 5.5
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** [https://9to5tutorial.com/try-installing-turbo-pascal-5-5-on-windows-10-64bit-11 Try installing Turbo Pascal 5.5 on Windows 10 (64bit) / 11]
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* [https://www.slac.stanford.edu/vault/collvault/greylit/cgtm/CGTM196.pdf Stanford Pascal Compiler]
  
 
[[Category: Languages]]
 
[[Category: Languages]]

Latest revision as of 16:29, 23 July 2024

Pascal was a strong-typed, structured language which had some popularity in the 1980s, although it lives on in various forms today (e.g. Delphi).

The language was written by Niklaus Wirth in 1968-1969. It was originally designed for teaching purposes and was lacking in some areas, it was for example not possible to write a function which could receive variable length arrays or -strings as parameters. Thus a plethora of variant implementations of Pascal followed which all improved on the original Wirth design, however not necessarily in a compatible way.

Hello world

program hello;
begin
  writeln('hello world');
end.

Compilers

  • Turbo Pascal

External links