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and the [[IBM 1400 series]].<ref>7010: Weik 1964, p. 0160; 7030:{{cite web
| title = IBM Stretch (aka IBM 7030 Data Processing System)
| url = http://www.brouhaha.com/~eric/retrocomputing/ibm/stretch/
| mode = cs2
}}, {{cite web
| title = Compilers and Computers: Partners in Performance
| url = http://www.cgo.org/cgo2003/keynote/FranAllenCGO.pdf
| mode = cs2
}}; 7070: {{cite web
| title = The IBM 7070
| author = Tom Van Vleck
| website = A Third Survey of Domestic Electronic Digital Computing Systems
| url = http://www.multicians.org/thvv/7070.html
| mode = cs2
}}, {{cite web
| title = IBM 7070
| author = Martin H. Weik
| publisher = Ballistic Research Laboratories, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland
| url = http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/BRL61-ibm7070.html
| mode = cs2
}}; 7080: [http://www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/052/ibmsj0502B.pdf]; 1400 series: [http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/dpd50/dpd50_chronology2.html], {{cite book
| title = 1410 Autocoder
| url = http://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/1410/C28-0309-1_1410_autocoder.pdf
| mode = cs2
}}.
</ref> Other manufacturers sometimes built competing products, such as [[NCR Corporation|NCR]]'s "National's Electronic Autocoder Technique" (NEAT).<ref>Weik 1964, p. 0202.</ref>
The Pennsylvania State University developed a "Dual Autocoder Fortran Translator" (DAFT) compiler for the IBM 7074 in the 1960's which made it extremely easy to write (within a single program) lines of autocoder instructions freely interspersed with lines of Fortran code. This allowed symbolic machine instruction level coding within a higher level Fortran program, which was especially useful for optimizing the speed of inner loops, or for making use of the IBM 7074's unusual decimal word architecture.{{cn|date=August 2019}}
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