Occam (programming language): Difference between revisions

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Undid revision 1002869486 by Amazing articles (talk) It is true that INMOS themselves did not make an own logo of occam, but they did do registered trademarks of the names "occam" and "occam 2". Scans from the covers of the two "occam books" collected into one has instead been made and then will represent occam like a logo, as by INMOS usage in 1983, 1988. –~~~~
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{{distinguishDistinguish|OCaml}}
[[File:1983 1988 Trademark occam and occam 2 INMOS Limited.jpg|thumb]]
{{lowercase title|occam (programming language)}}
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==Language revisions==
[[File:1983 Programming manual occam by INMOS Limited.jpg|thumb|1983 "occam" by INMOS Limited]]
 
===occam 1===
''occam 1''<ref name="oc1refman">{{cite book |author=<!--Must be person--> |author-link=Inmos |title=occam Programming Manual |publisher=Prentice-Hall |year=1984 |isbn=0-13-629296-8}}</ref> (released 1983) was a preliminary version of the language which borrowed from [[David May (computer scientist)|David May]]'s work on EPL and Tony Hoare's CSP. This supported only the VAR data type, which was an integral type corresponding to the native word length of the target architecture, and arrays of only one dimension.
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* [http://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/projects/ofa/kroc/ The occam-pi language].
* [http://projects.cs.kent.ac.uk/projects/tock/trac/ Tock occam compiler] – (translator from occam to C from Kent) a Haskell-based compiler for occam and related languages.
 
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[[Category:Concurrent programming languages]]