Talk:HAL/S

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Latest comment: 16 November 2018 by 98.6.1.174 in topic Acronym is wrong
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Put sum examples on here!

You mean examples of addition?

What in blazes is "problem domain knowledge"? This is the sort of prose that makes me glad I don't work for a defense contractor anymore. —Anville 17:50, 7 Feb 2005 (UTC)


It would be much cooler if the name was a reference to HAL 9000... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.248.175.112 (talk) 21:15, 6 November 2007 (UTC)Reply


HAL does not stand for 'High-order Assembly Language'. I worked on the compiler project with Intermetrics for a number of years, and the following is from Fred Martin, a founding member of the HAL group in Cambridge:

OK, the answer is quite simple. HAL is not an acronym. In fact the origin is right on the Preface page of the HAL/S Specification , IR-61-5, signed off by NASA Nov. 22, 1974. It says, "....Intermetrics wishes to acknowledge the fundamental contribution to the concept .....made by Dr. J. Halcombe Laning of the MIT's Draper Laboratory." "HAL" was suggested as the name of the new language by Ed Copps, a founding director of Intermetrics, to honor Hal Laning, a colleague at MIT.

I'm inclined to believe so, but it will be hard to convince me that people didn't even gossiped about it being called so because of HAL 9000...--NIC1138 (talk) 02:17, 20 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

GOTO

According to the documents @ [[1]] it most definitely has a "GOTO" although they seem to discourage it's use.

The only other flow control statement in HAL/S is GO TO. The experience of a number of large HAL/S programming projects has shown that the GOTO statement is not necessary. It is provided chiefly for mechanical translations from other languages.

That is from "Programming in HAL/S" pp82.

I may take a stab at rewording it

--Oregonerik (talk) 23:41, 14 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

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Acronym is wrong

My HAL/S manual is now at the Smithsonian Institution/National Air and Space Museum (SI/NASM). It has been scanned at the Computer History Museum as well. One of the compiler guys noted the wrong name. 98.6.1.174 (talk) 05:18, 16 November 2018 (UTC)Reply