PILOT
Simple high-level programming language developed in the 1960s / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For information on payments in lieu of taxes, see PILOT (finance). For PILOT Reports, see PIREP.
For other uses, see Pilot (disambiguation).
Programmed Inquiry, Learning, or Teaching (PILOT) is a simple high-level programming language developed in the 1960s.[1] Like its younger sibling LOGO, it was an early foray into the technology of computer-assisted instruction.
PILOT is an imperative language similar in structure to BASIC and FORTRAN in its basic layout and structure. Its keywords are single characters, T
for "type" to print text, or A
for "accept", to input values from the user.