Global Information Lookup Global Information

TELCOMP information


TELCOMP
DeveloperBBN
First appeared1965 (1965)
Influenced by
JOSS
Influenced
MUMPS

TELCOMP was a programming language developed at Bolt, Beranek and Newman (BBN) in about 1964 and in use until at least 1974. BBN offered TELCOMP as a paid service, with first revenue in October 1965.[1] The service was sold to On-Line Systems, Inc. (OLS) in 1972. In the United Kingdom, TELCOMP was offered by Time Sharing, Ltd, a partnership between BBN and an entrepreneur named Richard Evans.

It was an interactive, conversational language based on JOSS, developed by BBN after Cliff Shaw from RAND visited the labs in 1964 as part of the NIH survey. It was first implemented on the PDP-1 and was used to provide a commercial time sharing service by BBN in the Boston area and later by Time Sharing Ltd. in the United Kingdom.

In 1996, Leo Beranek said "We even developed a programming language called TELCOMP that to this day, some say was better than the programming language that the industry adopted, namely BASIC."[2]

There were at least three versions: TELCOMP I, TELCOMP II, and TELCOMP III.

TELCOMP I was implemented on the PDP-1, TELCOMP II on the PDP-7 and TELCOMP III on the PDP-10, running on DEC 's TOPS-10 operating system or on BBN's own TENEX operating system.

TELCOMP programs were normally input via a paper tape reader on a Teletype Model 33, which would be connected to a PDP via a modem and acoustic telephone line. Data could be read from the paper tape reader or from the Teletype keyboard. Output was either printed to the Teletype or sent to the paper tape punch. Early versions had no facility for on-line storage of programs or data.

During data input using a Teletype, the user would type a response to a printed prompt. If, instead of hitting Return, the user hit Tab ↹, another, possibly computed, prompt would be printed on the same line. This process could be repeated for the full width of the line. This unusual feature allowed very compact data entry, comparable to full-screen CRT data entry. It saved paper, and the input section of the form became part of the program's printed output.

A later derivative of TELCOMP called STRINGCOMP was oriented towards string handling. Another BBN JOSS-derivative called FILECOMP was developed for the GE MEDINET system, which was cancelled. The implicit file handling system it contained was influential on the MUMPS global database system.

The initial research for LOGO was carried out in TELCOMP, but only the JOSS-style errors and interaction made it through to the actual language.

  1. ^ "A Culture of Innovation Insider Accounts of Computing and Life at BBN - A Sixty Year Report 18 October 1948 to 1 July 2010" (PDF). Waterside Publishing. 2011. ISBN 978-0-9789737-0-4. Retrieved 2024-02-10.
  2. ^ "Leo Beranek Oral History". Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Archived from the original on 2004-08-05. Retrieved 2004-09-16.

and 11 Related for: TELCOMP information

Request time (Page generated in 0.5071 seconds.)

TELCOMP

Last Update:

three versions: TELCOMP I, TELCOMP II, and TELCOMP III. TELCOMP I was implemented on the PDP-1, TELCOMP II on the PDP-7 and TELCOMP III on the PDP-10...

Word Count : 783

STRINGCOMP

Last Update:

Newman (BBN). It was one of the three variants of JOSS II (along with TELCOMP and FILECOMP) that were developed by BBN. It had extended string handling...

Word Count : 59

Wally Feurzeig

Last Update:

schools. BBN had recently implemented TELCOMP, one of the new breed of high-level interactive programming languages. TELCOMP was a dialect of JOSS, the first...

Word Count : 859

List of programming languages

Last Update:

Adventure Development System) TAL Tcl Tea TECO (Text Editor and Corrector) TELCOMP TeX TEX (Text Executive Programming Language) TIE TMG (TransMoGrifier)...

Word Count : 1316

JOSS

Last Update:

variety of ports and offshoots. Some remained similar to the original, like TELCOMP and STRINGCOMP, CAL, CITRAN, ISIS, PIL/I, JEAN (ICT 1900 series), Algebraic...

Word Count : 5721

FILECOMP

Last Update:

Newman (BBN). It was one of the three variants of JOSS II (along with TELCOMP and STRINGCOMP) that were developed by BBN. The language was developed...

Word Count : 229

Timeline of programming languages

Last Update:

RPG 1965 MAD/I (concept) University of Michigan MAD, ALGOL 60, PL/I 1965 TELCOMP BBN JOSS 1965 Atlas Autocode Tony Brooker, Derrick Morris at Manchester...

Word Count : 229

Generational list of programming languages

Last Update:

js CoffeeScript ECMAScript JavaScript OSA JScript TypeScript JOSS CAL TELCOMP FOCAL MUMPS Caché ObjectScript JOSS also inspired features for several...

Word Count : 1105

Raytheon BBN

Last Update:

members include Jim Breyer, Anita K. Jones and Gilman Louie. In 1971, BBN's TELCOMP subsidiary was sold. In the 1970s, BBN created Telenet, Inc., to run the...

Word Count : 3238

MUMPS

Last Update:

aspects of MUMPS can be traced from RAND Corporation's JOSS through BBN's TELCOMP and STRINGCOMP. The MUMPS team chose to include portability between machines...

Word Count : 5574

Time Sharing Limited

Last Update:

access to persistent storage based on NCR CRAM Memory. The system used the TELCOMP interpretive language that had been developed by Bolt, Beranek and Newman...

Word Count : 574

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net