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In the early 1990s, a new PC-based tool for developing LINC specifications was released, the LINC Development Assistant (LDA). LDA was written in a mixture of Smalltalk and C++ rather than the LINC 4GL (the latter of which was not intended to run on a personal computer). From version 17, it was intended that all development be done with LDA.
The development of the 4GL was influenced by several factors, with the hardware and operating system constraints having a large weight. When the 4GL was first introduced, a disparate mix of hardware and operating systems mandated custom application development support that was specific to the system in order to ensure sales.
ELF—Executable and Linkable Format; ELM—ELectronic Mail; EMACS—Editor MACroS; EMS—Expanded Memory Specification; ENIAC—Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer; EOF—End of File; EOL—End of Life; EOL—End of Line; EOM—End of Message; EOS—End of Support; EPIC—Explicitly Parallel Instruction Computing; EPROM—Erasable ...
Specifications must be subject to a process of refinement (the filling-in of implementation detail) before they can actually be implemented. The result of such a refinement process is an executable algorithm, which is either formulated in a programming language, or in an executable subset of the specification language at hand.
Informix-4GL is a 4GL programming language developed by Informix during the mid-1980s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] At the time of its initial release in 1986, supported platforms included Microsoft Xenix (on IBM PC AT ), DEC Ultrix (running on Microvax II , VAX-11/750 , VAX-11/785 , VAX 8600 ), Altos 2086 , AT&T 3B2 , AT&T 3B5, AT&T 3B20 and AT&T Unix PC .
RAMIS ("Random Access Management Information System") is a fourth-generation programming language (4GL) capable of creating and maintaining databases consisting of named files containing both numeric and alphabetic fields and subsequently producing detailed simple or complex reports using a very simple English like language. As such it is ...
The language was called PROGRESS or Progress 4GL up until version 9, but in 2006, PSC changed the name to OpenEdge Advanced Business Language (OpenEdge ABL), in order to overcome a presumed industry perception that 4GLs were less capable than other languages.
Driver Verifier is a tool included in Microsoft Windows that replaces the default operating system subroutines with ones that are specifically developed to catch device driver bugs. [1] Once enabled, it monitors and stresses drivers to detect illegal function calls or actions that may be causing system corruption.