Pop-11
<language> A programming language created by Robin Popplestone in 1975,
originally for the PDP-11. Pop-11 is stack-oriented, extensible, and efficient
like FORTH. It is also functional, dynamically typed, interactive, with garbage
collection like LISP, and the syntax is block structured like Pascal.
["Programming in POP-11", J. Laventhol <jcl@deshaw.com>, Blackwell
1987].
AlphaPop is an implementation for the Macintosh from Computable Functions Inc.
PopTalk and POPLOG from the University of Sussex are available for VAX/VMS and
most workstations.
E-mail: Robin Popplestone <pop@cs.umass.edu>
(2003-03-25)
Nearby terms:
POP++ « POP-1 « POP-10 « Pop-11 » POP-2 »
POP3 » POP-9X
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