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MUMPS ("Massachusetts General Hospital Utility Multi-Programming System"), or M, is an imperative, high-level programming language with an integrated transaction processing key–value database.
MUMPS is a high performance transaction processing key–value database with integrated programming language. MUMPS allows multiple commands to appear on a line, grouped into procedures (subroutines) in a fashion similar to most structured programming systems. Storing variables in the database (and on other machines on the network) is designed ...
The Profile application conversion from MUMPS to PSL was 100% completed in 2006, with the release of Profile version 7.0. Profile version 7.0 was also the first commercial version of the application that could be targeted to run on either a GT.M MUMPS database or an Oracle 9 database, with GT.M MUMPS source code as the PSL target.
GT.M is a high-throughput key–value database engine optimized for transaction processing. (It is a type also referred to as "schema-less", "schema-free", or "NoSQL".)GT.M is also an application development platform and a compiler for the ISO standard M language, also known as MUMPS.
Caché ObjectScript is a part of the Caché database system sold by InterSystems.The language is a functional superset of the ANSI-standard MUMPS programming language.Since Caché is at its core a MUMPS implementation, it can run ANSI MUMPS routines with no change.
MUMPS (MUltifrontal Massively Parallel sparse direct Solver) is a software application for the solution of large sparse systems of linear algebraic equations on distributed memory parallel computers. It was developed in European project PARASOL (1996–1999) by CERFACS , IRIT - ENSEEIHT and RAL .
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Languages in the MUMPS programming language family derive from MUMPS, or have the imperative command style of MUMPS. Some of these languages were developed at the time of the great explosion of MUMPS implementations in the 1970s and were never standardized.