APL*PLUS: Difference between revisions
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'''APL*PLUS''' (stylised as '''APL⋆PLUS''') was originally the [[APL\360]] derivative jointly marketed by [[STSC]] and [[IPSA]]. Eventually the companies parted ways, and IPSA re-branded their product as [[SHARP APL]]. | '''APL*PLUS''' (stylised as '''APL⋆PLUS''') was originally the [[APL\360]] derivative jointly marketed by [[STSC]] and [[IPSA]]. Eventually the companies parted ways, and IPSA re-branded their product as [[SHARP APL]]. | ||
APL*PLUS was an extension of APL\360, and as such was written in [[wikipedia:IBM_Basic_Assembly_Language_and_successors|IBM\360 assembler]]. STSC reimplemented the language in [[wikipedia:C (programming language)|C]] for the [[wikipedia:IBM PC|IBM PC]], and released it as APL*PLUS/PC. A derivative "2nd generation APL", adopting extensions from [[NARS]] and later [[APL2]] was released in 1990 as APL*PLUS/II. A further version was called APL*PLUS/III. | APL*PLUS was an extension of APL\360, and as such was written in [[wikipedia:IBM_Basic_Assembly_Language_and_successors|IBM\360 assembler]]. STSC reimplemented the language in [[wikipedia:C (programming language)|C]] for the [[wikipedia:IBM PC|IBM PC]], and released it as APL*PLUS/PC in 1982. A derivative "2nd generation APL", adopting extensions from [[NARS]] and later [[APL2]] was released in 1990 as APL*PLUS/II. A further version was called APL*PLUS/III. | ||
In 1992, STSC changed name to Manugistics, and in 1995, APL*PLUS was sold off to LEX2000 Financial Reporting Software, which then created a subsidiary named APL2000. The product was re-launched as APL+, with specific names APL+Win and APL+Unx for [[wikipedia:Microsoft Windows|Microsoft Windows]] and [[wikipedia:UNIX|UNIX]], respectively. When UNIX support was abandoned, APL+Win became the sole product name. | In 1992, STSC changed name to Manugistics, and in 1995, APL*PLUS was sold off to LEX2000 Financial Reporting Software, which then created a subsidiary named APL2000. The product was re-launched as APL+, with specific names APL+Win and APL+Unx for [[wikipedia:Microsoft Windows|Microsoft Windows]] and [[wikipedia:UNIX|UNIX]], respectively. When UNIX support was abandoned, APL+Win became the sole product name. | ||
{{APL dialects}}[[Category:APL dialects]][[Category:Nested array languages]] | {{APL dialects}}[[Category:APL dialects]][[Category:Nested array languages]] |
Revision as of 14:43, 24 May 2021
APL*PLUS (stylised as APL⋆PLUS) was originally the APL\360 derivative jointly marketed by STSC and IPSA. Eventually the companies parted ways, and IPSA re-branded their product as SHARP APL.
APL*PLUS was an extension of APL\360, and as such was written in IBM\360 assembler. STSC reimplemented the language in C for the IBM PC, and released it as APL*PLUS/PC in 1982. A derivative "2nd generation APL", adopting extensions from NARS and later APL2 was released in 1990 as APL*PLUS/II. A further version was called APL*PLUS/III.
In 1992, STSC changed name to Manugistics, and in 1995, APL*PLUS was sold off to LEX2000 Financial Reporting Software, which then created a subsidiary named APL2000. The product was re-launched as APL+, with specific names APL+Win and APL+Unx for Microsoft Windows and UNIX, respectively. When UNIX support was abandoned, APL+Win became the sole product name.
APL dialects [edit] | |
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Maintained | APL+Win ∙ APL2 ∙ APL64 ∙ APL\iv ∙ Aplette ∙ April ∙ Co-dfns ∙ Dyalog APL ∙ Dyalog APL Vision ∙ dzaima/APL ∙ GNU APL ∙ Kap ∙ NARS2000 ∙ Pometo ∙ TinyAPL |
Historical | A Programming Language ∙ A+ (A) ∙ APL# ∙ APL2C ∙ APL\360 ∙ APL/700 ∙ APL\1130 ∙ APL\3000 ∙ APL.68000 ∙ APL*PLUS ∙ APL.jl ∙ APL.SV ∙ APLX ∙ Extended Dyalog APL ∙ Iverson notation ∙ IVSYS/7090 ∙ NARS ∙ ngn/apl ∙ openAPL ∙ Operators and Functions ∙ PAT ∙ Rowan ∙ SAX ∙ SHARP APL ∙ Rationalized APL ∙ VisualAPL (APLNext) ∙ VS APL ∙ York APL |
Derivatives | AHPL ∙ BQN ∙ CoSy ∙ ELI ∙ Glee ∙ I ∙ Ivy ∙ J ∙ Jelly ∙ K (Goal, Klong, Q) ∙ KamilaLisp ∙ Lang5 ∙ Lil ∙ Nial ∙ RAD ∙ Uiua |
Overviews | Comparison of APL dialects ∙ Timeline of array languages ∙ Timeline of influential array languages ∙ Family tree of array languages |