ABC (programming language)

Last updated
ABC
Paradigms multi-paradigm: imperative, procedural, structured
Designed by Leo Geurts, Lambert Meertens, Steven Pemberton
Developer Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI)
First appearedJanuary 1987;38 years ago (1987-01)
Stable release
1.05.02 / 1990;35 years ago (1990)
Typing discipline strong, polymorphic
OS Unix-like, Windows, MacOS, and Atari TOS
Website homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/abc/
Influenced by
SETL, ALGOL 68 [1]
Influenced
Python

ABC is an imperative general-purpose programming language and integrated development environment (IDE) developed at Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI), in Amsterdam, Netherlands by Leo Geurts, Lambert Meertens, and Steven Pemberton. [2] It is interactive, structured, high-level, and intended to be used instead of BASIC, Pascal, or AWK. It is intended for teaching or prototyping, but not as a systems-programming language.

Contents

ABC had a major influence on the design of the language Python, developed by Guido van Rossum, who formerly worked for several years on the ABC system in the mid-1980s. [3] [4]

Features

Its designers claim that ABC programs are typically around a quarter the size of the equivalent Pascal or C programs, and more readable. [5] Key features include:

ABC was originally a monolithic implementation, leading to an inability to adapt to new requirements, such as creating a graphical user interface (GUI). ABC could not directly access the underlying file system and operating system.

The full ABC system includes a programming environment with a structure editor (syntax-directed editor), suggestions, static variables (persistent), and multiple workspaces, and is available as an interpretercompiler. As of 2020, the latest version is 1.05.02, for Unix, MS-DOS, Atari ST, and MacOS.

Example

An example function to collect the set of all words in a document: [6]

HOW TO RETURN words document:    PUT {} IN collection    FOR line IN document:       FOR word IN split line:          IF word not.in collection:             INSERT word IN collection    RETURN collection

Implementations

ABC has been through multiple iterations, with the current version being the 4th major release. Implementations exist for Unix-like systems, MS-DOS/Windows, Macintosh, and other platforms. The source code was made available via Usenet in the late 1980s/early 1990s.

References

  1. Biancuzzi, Federico; Warden, Shane (April 2009). Masterminds of Programming: Conversations with the Creators of Major Programming Languages. O'Reilly Media. p. 32. ISBN   978-0-596-51517-1 . Retrieved December 14, 2009. He [Lambert Meertens] was clearly influenced by ALGOL 68's philosophy of providing constructs that can be combined in many different ways to produce all sorts of different data structures or ways of structuring a program. – Guido van Rossum
  2. Pemberton, Steven (January 1987). "An Alternative Simple Language and Environment for PCs". IEEE Software. 4 (1): 56–64. doi:10.1109/MS.1987.229797. S2CID   12788361.
  3. Hamilton, Naomi (2008-05-08). "The A-Z of Programming Languages: Python". Computerworld. IDG Communications. Archived from the original on 2008-12-29. Retrieved 2020-09-04. ... I figured I could design and implement a language 'almost, but not quite, entirely unlike' ABC, improving upon ABC's deficiencies, ...
  4. Stewart, Bruce (2002-06-04). "An Interview with Guido van Rossum". ONLamp.com. O’Reilly Media. Archived from the original on 2013-03-13. Retrieved 2020-09-04. ... in my head I had analyzed some of the reasons it had failed.
  5. Pemberton, Steven (2012-02-22). "The ABC Programming Language: a short introduction". Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI). Amsterdam. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  6. This article is based on material taken from ABC at the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing prior to 1 November 2008 and incorporated under the "relicensing" terms of the GFDL, version 1.3 or later.

Further reading