Euclid (programming language): Difference between revisions

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'''Euclid''' is an imperative programming language for writing [[Formal verification|verifiable]] programs. It was designed by [[Butler Lampson]] and associates at the [[Xerox PARC]] lab in the mid 1970s. The implementation was led by [[Ric Holt]] at the [[University of Toronto]] and [[James Cordy]] was the principal programmer for the first implementation of the [[compiler]]. It was originally designed for the [[Motorola 6809]] microprocessor. It was considered innovative for the time; the compiler development team had a $2 million budget over 2 years and was commissioned by the [[Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency]] of the [[United States Department of Defense|U.S. Department of Defense]] and the [[Department of National Defence (Canada)|Canadian Department of National Defence]]. It was used for a few years at [[I. P. Sharp Associates]], [[MITRE|MITRE Corporation]], [[SRI International]] and various other international institutes for research in systems programming and secure software systems.
 
Euclid is descended from the [[Pascal programming language]]. Functions in Euclid are closed scopes, may not have side effects, and must explicitly declare imports. Euclid also disallows [[GOTO|goto]]s, floating point numbers, global assignments, [[nested functionsfunction]]s and aliases, and none of the actual parameters to a function can refer to the same thing. Euclid implements modules as types. Descendants of Euclid include the [[Mesa programming language]], the [[Concurrent Euclid programming language]] and the [[Turing programming language]].
 
==External links==