Analitik
Programming language developed in the USSR From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Programming language developed in the USSR From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Analitik (Russian: Аналитик) is a programming language,[2] developed in 1968[1][3][4][5] at the Institute of Cybernetics of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR in the USSR. It is a development on the ALMIR-65 language,[6] keeping compatibility with it.
Paradigm | A distinctive feature of the language are abstract data types, calculations in arbitrary algebras, and analytic transformations. |
---|---|
Designed by | Victor Glushkov & Co |
Developer | Poltava National Technical University |
First appeared | January 1, 1968[1] |
Website | About Analitik |
Major implementations | |
MIR-2, MIR-3 | |
Dialects | |
Analitik-74, Analitik-2007, Analitik-2010 | |
Influenced by | |
ALMIR-65 | |
Influenced | |
Analitik-74, Analitik-2007, Analitik-2010 |
Distinctive features of the language are abstract data types, calculations in arbitrary algebras, and analytic transformations.
It was implemented on MIR-2 machines.[4]
Later, a version of Analitik-74 was developed, implemented on MIR-3[1] machines.
At the moment, the language exists as a computer algebra system, Analitik-2010, which is being developed jointly by the Institute of Mathematical Machines and Systems of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and the Poltava National Technical University.
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