The Atlanta Public Schools Computer Center (APSCC) ran APL\360, and later APL.SV during the 1970s. I know; I maintained the system for several years. After I left the APSCC, I worked for several years at The Computer Company (TCC) in Richmond, VA, which is also mentioned in the article. Finding good refs for that history will be interesting—I wonder how many of the folks are still alive.
If I can find some sources, I'll update the article to include the APSCC info—we taught a lot of kids (and several teachers) to code in APL during that decade. — [[User:UncleBubba|<b style="color:black">Uncl</b><b style="color:darkred">eBubba</b>]] <b><sup>( [[User talk:UncleBubba|T]] [[Special:Emailuser/UncleBubba|@]] [[Special:Contributions/UncleBubba|C]] )</sup></b> 00:30, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
== APL on large vector machines ==
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Is Snap! really based on APL? Is it vandalism?
[[Special:Contributions/89.67.244.199|89.67.244.199]] ([[User talk:89.67.244.199|talk]]) 13:21, 31 December 2023 (UTC)
== 1a2b3d4e5F 3rd ==
With bold letters [[Special:Contributions/41.210.143.138|41.210.143.138]] ([[User talk:41.210.143.138|talk]]) 18:34, 20 August 2025 (UTC)