Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In the meantime, she published her first paper on the subject, compilers, in 1952. In the early 1950s, the company was taken over by the Remington Rand corporation, and it was while she was working for them that her original compiler work was done. The program was known as the A compiler and its first version was A-0. [26]: 11
Albert B. Tonik, [2] J. R. Logan Short Code (for UNIVAC I) 1952 A-0: Grace Hopper: Short Code 1952 Glennie Autocode: Alick Glennie after Alan Turing: CPC Coding scheme 1952 Operator programming Alexey Andreevich Lyapunov with the participation Kateryna Yushchenko: MESM: 1952 Editing Generator Milly Koss SORT/MERGE 1952 COMPOOL RAND/SDC none ...
The first high-level programming language was Plankalkül, created by Konrad Zuse between 1942 and 1945. [2] The first high-level language to have an associated compiler was created by Corrado Böhm in 1951, for his PhD thesis. [3]
OpenVMS V1.0 (First OpenVMS AXP (Alpha) specific version, November 1992) OS/2 2.0 (First i386 32-bit based version) Plan 9 First Edition (First public release was made available to universities) RSTS/E 10.1 (Last stable release, September 1992) SLS; Solaris 2.0 (Successor to SunOS 4.x; based on SVR4 instead of BSD) Windows 3.1; 1993 IBM 4690 ...
After the second world war he established the Computing Machine Laboratory at the University of Manchester where he created the project that built the world's first stored-program computer, the Manchester Baby. 1962 Nygaard, Kristen: With Ole-Johan Dahl, invented the proto-object oriented language SIMULA. 1642 Pascal, Blaise
This second part of the compiler can also be created by a compiler-compiler using a formal rules-of-precedence syntax-description as input. The first compiler-compiler to use that name was written by Tony Brooker in 1960 and was used to create compilers for the Atlas computer at the University of Manchester, including the Atlas Autocode compiler
In 1961, a 49-second vector animation of a car traveling up a planned highway at 110 km/h (70 mph) was created at the Swedish Royal Institute of Technology on the BESK computer. The short animation was broadcast on November 9, 1961, on national television. [3] [4] Simulation of a Two-Gyro Gravity-Gradient Attitude Control System: 1963
Grace Hopper worked as one of the first programmers of the Harvard Mark I. [12] She later created a 500-page manual for the computer. [13] Hopper is often falsely credited with coining the terms "bug" and "debugging," when she found a moth in the Mark II, causing a malfunction; [14] however, the term was in fact already in use when she found ...