APL

from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
A Programming Language
APL
ISO 8485

   <language> (APL) A language designed originally by Ken Iverson
   at {Harvard University} in 1957-1960 as a notation for the
   concise expression of mathematical {algorithms}.  It went
   unnamed (or just called {Iverson's Language}) and
   unimplemented for many years.  Finally a subset, APL\360, was
   implemented in 1964.

   APL is an {interactive} {array-oriented} language and
   programming environment with many innovative features.  It was
   originally written using a non-standard {character set}.

   It is {dynamically typed} with {dynamic scope}.  APL
   introduced several functional forms but is not {purely
   functional}.

   {Dyadic Systems} {APL/W} is one of the languages that will be
   available under {Microsoft}'s {.NET} initative.

   {ISO 8485} is the 1989 standard defining the language.

   Versions: APL\360, APL SV, {Dyalog APL}, VS APL, Sharp APL,
   Sharp APL/PC, APL*PLUS, APL*PLUS/PC, APL*PLUS/PC II, MCM APL,
   Honeyapple, DEC APL, Cognos APL2000
   (http://apl2000.com/), IBM APL2.

   See also {Kamin's interpreters}.

   {APLWEB} translates {WEB} to {APL}.

   {Dijkstra} said that APL was a language designed to perfection
   - in the wrong direction.

   ["A Programming Language", Kenneth E. Iverson, Wiley, 1962].

   ["APL: An Interactive Approach", 1976].

   (2004-02-13)
    
from V.E.R.A. -- Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (June 2006)
APL
       A Perspicuous Language / Alles Parallel Loesbar (APL, slang)
       
    
from V.E.R.A. -- Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (June 2006)
APL
       A Programming Language (IBM)
       
    

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