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{{Not verified|date=February 2007}}
'''PowerHouse''' is a trademarked name for a family of [[Bytecode|byte-compiled]] [[programming language]]s originally produced by [[Quasar Corporation|Quasar]] for the [[Hewlett-Packard]] ''[[HP3000]]'' mini-computer. It was comprised of three components:
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== History ==
PowerHouse was introduced in [[1982]] by Quasar Corporation and bundled together Quiz and Quick, both of which had been previously available separately, with a new batch processor QTP, now sold as a single product. In [[1983]], Quasar changed its name to ''Cognos Corporation'' and began porting their application development tools to other platforms, notably [[IBM]]'s series 400 (later rebranded as the [[AS/400]]). Cognos also began extending their product line with add-ons to PowerHouse (for example, ''Architect'') and end-user applications written in PowerHouse (for example, ''MultiView''). {{
The PowerHouse language represented a considerable achievement. Compared with languages like ''[[Cobol]]'', [[Pascal programming language|''Pascal'']] and ''[[PL/1]]'', ''PowerHouse'' substantially cut the amount of labour required to produce useful applications on its chosen platforms. It achieved this through the use of a central data-dictionary, a compiled file that extended the attributes of data fields natively available in the DBMS with frequently used programming idioms such as:
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In order to support the data dictionary PowerHouse was tightly coupled to the underlying database management system on each of the target platforms. In the case of the HP3000 this was the ''Image'' shallow-network DBMS, and the entire PowerHouse language reflected its origins.
Like all [[virtual machine]] languages PowerHouse is CPU intensive.{{
== Migration to the PC ==
Cognos attempted to move to the [[Intel]] platform in 1988 (''PowerHouse PC'') but was unsuccessful at that time. However, Cognos eventually produced Axiant (c.1995), which ported PowerHouse-like syntax to an Intel-based [[Microsoft Windows]] visual development environment and linked it to [[SQL]] aware [[DBMS]] running on these machines. The radical changes wrought by the PC revolution, which began just at the time ''PowerHouse'' was introduced, eventually brought down the cost of host computers to such an extent that high-priced software development tools such as PowerHouse became unattractive to customers.{{
Although ''PowerHouse'' is still available and continues to receive occasional minor updates, by 1999 ''Cognos'' had all but ceased further development of ''PowerHouse'' on mid-range computers in favour of newer product lines. Around [[1999]] ''Powerhouse Web'' was released in order to support the development [[World Wide Web|web-aware]] applications.{{
==External links==
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