responsibility for ALGOL transferred to Working Group 2.1 of IFIP Technical Committee 2.
The MARST package includes three main components: the translator, MARST, that translates Algol 60 programs to the C programming language. NASE A60 is based on the ``Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language Algol 60'' (The file RRA60.txt contains a source form of the report; it is not covererd by the COPYING permissions).
And you are right in your introduction to mention the major languages of that time. 1963: publication of the Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 60 ECMA Subset of ALGOL 60 1964 This is quite aging stuff, please forgive, it is not updated every year ;) The latest source a60-0.23a.tar.gz This is a short access page to the NASE A60 Algol Interpreter source. Algol 60 is an interpreter for Algol-60, the common ancestor of C, Pascal, Modula, Algol-68, Ada, and most other conventional languages that aren't BASIC, FORTRAN, or COBOL.
Indeed, you could enumerate the languages as there were so few. 2. Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 60 (pub. Algol 60 Standard Algol 60 Translators HelloAlgol Collection Algol 60 Lego Pieces Algol 60 Libraries ACM first 100 Algorithms Algol 60 History Algol 60 Documentation AlgolBulletins Comparison with FortranII Comparison with Simula67 Steps in Algol development Build-in Data Types Algol interpreter taxi AlgolW introduction/history
Each with their own special field of application, like Fortran and Cobol.
Algol 60 interpreter NASE A60. It gave rise to many other programming languages, including CPL, Simula, BCPL, B, Pascal, and C. Practically every computer of the era had a sy… Algol 60 was the first computer language I learned in 1978. ALGOL 60 was the first language implementing nested function definitions with lexical scope.
At school, a long time ago, I learned Algol 60 in a completely theoretical manner. The io-section of the interpreter is not complete at all, but basic things are still working. 1963) (reviewed by IFIP TC 2 on Programming Languages in August 1962). The io-section of the interpreter is not complete at all, but basic things are still working.
The Goal of the Interpreter. This Algol 60 interpreter is based upon the “Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language Algol 60” [RRA60]. ALGOL 60 is a member of the ALGOL family of computer programming languages. NASE A60 is based on the ``Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language Algol 60'' (The file RRA60.txt contains a source form of the report; it is not covererd by the COPYING permissions). MARST is an Algol-to-C translator. It followed on from ALGOL 58 which had introduced code blocks and the begin and end pairs for delimiting them, representing a key advance in the rise of structured programming. It automatically translates programs written on the algorithmic language Algol 60 to the C programming language.