<
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, APL360, 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: APL360, 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, 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)