DS Museum of Computer Architectures: Difference between revisions
From Cibernética Americana
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (Protected "Dominion Museum of Computer Architectures" ([edit=sysop] (indefinite) [move=sysop] (indefinite))) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
= [[Literate Programming]] = | = [[Literate Programming]] = | ||
( [[ALGOL|g11n]] [[Haskell (programming language)|Haskell]] [[Lisp (programming language)|Lisp]] [[Prolog]] [[Smalltalk]] ) | ( [[ALGOL|g11n]] [[Haskell (programming language)|Haskell]] [[Lisp (programming language)|Lisp]] [[Prolog]] [[Smalltalk]] ) | ||
<center>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/user:lycurgus/MoCA | <center>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/user:lycurgus/MoCA External Version] <br/> [mailto:juan@acm.org wiki matters] [mailto:root@meansofproduction.biz other] </center> | ||
= Museum of Computer Architectures = | = Museum of Computer Architectures = |
Revision as of 02:37, 28 March 2009
Literate Programming
( g11n Haskell Lisp Prolog Smalltalk )
wiki matters other
Museum of Computer Architectures
Once upon a time, a systems programmer¹ would have Reference Card(s) like the 6 below².
|
Δ Lycurgus 15 Seed, 4707 公元 Sun 15:50:00 EDT
¹ And in those days any good programmer. Descending broadly to that level is seldom justified for any programmer today. If I survive iAPXx86 will display its bones someplace too.
² Until the last '90s I had the iAPX 432 Reference Manuals which I now regret throwing away.
Burroughs B6800
|
Burroughs CANDE
|
IBM System 360
|
IBM System 370
|
PDP 11
|
UNIVAC 1108
|