- the
successor of
WATFOR.
WATFIV was used from the late 1960s into the mid-1980s.
WATFIV was in turn
succeeded by
later versions of
WATFOR.
Because it could...
-
programming language compiler called WATFOR (WATerloo FORtran), for the IBM System/360
family of computers. The /360
WATFOR project was
initiated by Professor...
-
distributed by the
University of Waterloo,
WATFOR was
based largely on
FORTRAN IV. A
student using WATFOR could submit their batch FORTRAN job and, if...
- J++ (Visual J plus plus)
Visual LISP
Visual Objects Visual Prolog WATFIV,
WATFOR (WATerloo
FORtran IV) Web****embly
WebDNA Whiley Wolfram Language Wyvern...
-
eventually known as
WATFOR, and was
eventually to be used by
students at 420
postsecondary institutions around the world.
WATFOR was
followed by similar...
-
performance of the
Fortran compiler. In the
summer of 1965 they
wrote the
WATFOR compiler for
their 7040,
which became po****r with many
newly formed computer...
-
built under the
design philosophy, of Waterloo's earlier,
widely used
WATFOR teaching compiler.
Since programs written by
undergraduate students were...
- II
BASIC (see also
BASIC based) SAKO
Fortran IV
WATFOR WATFIV Fortran 66
FORMAC Ratfor Fortran 77
WATFOR-77
Ratfiv Fortran 90
Fortran 95 F
Fortran 2003...
- and not
saved to the file system.
Examples of compile-and-go
systems are
WATFOR, PL/C, and
Dartmouth BASIC. An
example of load-and-go
systems is the loader...
- He has
worked on
programming language design and
implementation (FORTRAN
WATFOR, Mesa, Euclid, C++, Java),
interactive programming systems,
dynamic interpreting...