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This version of the language is commonly known as Ada 83, from the date of its adoption by ANSI, but is sometimes referred to also as Ada 87, from the date of its adoption by ISO. [40] There is also a French translation; DIN translated it into German as DIN 66268 in 1988.
Example of Ada validation certificate awarded to vendor after passing the ACVC tests, 1986. The Ada Compiler Validation Capability test suite, commonly referred to as the ACVC tests, [1] was the original test suite developed for the Ada language. The ACVC system was organized under the aegis of the Ada Joint Program Office. [2]
Pages in category "Ada (programming language)" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
This category lists dialects of the Ada programming language. Thanks to the ACATS/ISO 18009 most Ada compiler are not dialect and therefore this list is short.
ISO/IEC 8652 Information technology — Programming languages — Ada [1] is the international standard for the computer programming language Ada.It was produced by the Ada Working Group, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG 9, of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC).
DIANA is also used by PL/SQL, which is based on Ada. DIANA is an abstract data type; its concrete implementations are defined using the IDL specification language. DIANA descends from TCOL and AIDA, earlier representations of Ada programs. The Ada-0 subset of Ada at Karlsruhe (1980) was first using AIDA, [1] but later
A# is a port of the Ada programming language to the Microsoft .NET platform. A# is freely distributed by the Department of Computer Science at the United States Air Force Academy as a service to the Ada community under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
Ada Programming Support Environment or APSE, was a specification for a programming environment to support software development in the Ada programming language.This represented the second stage of the U.S. military Ada project; once the language was implemented, it was felt necessary to specify and implement a standard set of tools, hence the APSE.