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ALGOL 60 (short for ''Algorithmic Language 1960'') is a member of the
ALGOL ALGOL (; short for "Algorithmic Language") is a family of imperative computer programming languages originally developed in 1958. ALGOL heavily influenced many other languages and was the standard method for algorithm description used by th ...
family of computer programming languages. It followed on from
ALGOL 58 ALGOL 58, originally named IAL, is one of the family of ALGOL computer programming languages. It was an early compromise design soon superseded by ALGOL 60. According to John Backus The Zurich ACM-GAMM Conference had two principal motives in p ...
which had introduced code blocks and the begin and end pairs for delimiting them, representing a key advance in the rise of structured programming. ALGOL 60 was the first language implementing nested function definitions with
lexical scope In computer programming, the scope of a name binding (an association of a name to an entity, such as a variable) is the part of a program where the name binding is valid; that is, where the name can be used to refer to the entity. In other part ...
. It gave rise to many other programming languages, including CPL,
Simula Simula is the name of two simulation programming languages, Simula I and Simula 67, developed in the 1960s at the Norwegian Computing Center in Oslo, by Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard. Syntactically, it is an approximate superset of AL ...
, BCPL, B, Pascal, and C. Practically every computer of the era had a systems programming language based on ALGOL 60 concepts. Niklaus Wirth based his own
ALGOL W ALGOL W is a programming language. It is based on a proposal for ALGOL X by Niklaus Wirth and Tony Hoare as a successor to ALGOL 60. ALGOL W is a relatively simple upgrade of the original ALGOL 60, adding string, bitstring, complex number a ...
on ALGOL 60 before moving to develop Pascal. Algol-W was intended to be the next generation ALGOL but the
ALGOL 68 ALGOL 68 (short for ''Algorithmic Language 1968'') is an imperative programming language that was conceived as a successor to the ALGOL 60 programming language, designed with the goal of a much wider scope of application and more rigorously ...
committee decided on a design that was more complex and advanced rather than a cleaned simplified ALGOL 60. The official ALGOL versions are named after the year they were first published. Algol 68 is substantially different from Algol 60 and was criticised partially for being so, so that in general "Algol" refers to dialects of Algol 60.


Standardization

ALGOL 60 – with COBOL – were the first languages to seek standardization.
ISO 1538:1984
Programming languages – Algol 60 (stabilized)

Hardware representation of ALGOL basic symbols ... (now withdrawn)


History

ALGOL 60 was used mostly by research computer scientists in the United States and in Europe. Its use in commercial applications was hindered by the absence of standard input/output facilities in its description and the lack of interest in the language by large computer vendors. ALGOL 60 did however become the standard for the publication of algorithms and had a profound effect on future language development. John Backus developed the Backus normal form method of describing programming languages specifically for ALGOL 58. It was revised and expanded by Peter Naur for ALGOL 60, and at
Donald Knuth Donald Ervin Knuth ( ; born January 10, 1938) is an American computer scientist, mathematician, and professor emeritus at Stanford University. He is the 1974 recipient of the ACM Turing Award, informally considered the Nobel Prize of computer ...
's suggestion renamed Backus–Naur form. Peter Naur: "As editor of the ALGOL Bulletin I was drawn into the international discussions of the language and was selected to be member of the European language design group in November 1959. In this capacity I was the editor of the ALGOL 60 report, produced as the result of the ALGOL 60 meeting in Paris in January 1960."ACM Award Citation / Peter Naur
2005
The following people attended the meeting in Paris (from January 11 to 16): * Friedrich L. Bauer, Peter Naur, Heinz Rutishauser, Klaus Samelson, Bernard Vauquois, Adriaan van Wijngaarden, and Michael Woodger (from Europe) * John W. Backus,
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, Charles Katz, John McCarthy, Alan J. Perlis, and Joseph Henry Wegstein (from the USA). Alan Perlis gave a vivid description of the meeting: "The meetings were exhausting, interminable, and exhilarating. One became aggravated when one's good ideas were discarded along with the bad ones of others. Nevertheless, diligence persisted during the entire period. The chemistry of the 13 was excellent." The language originally did not include
recursion Recursion (adjective: ''recursive'') occurs when a thing is defined in terms of itself or of its type. Recursion is used in a variety of disciplines ranging from linguistics to logic. The most common application of recursion is in mathematic ...
. It was inserted into the specification at the last minute, against the wishes of some of the committee. ALGOL 60 inspired many languages that followed it. Tony Hoare remarked: "Here is a language so far ahead of its time that it was not only an improvement on its predecessors but also on nearly all its successors."


ALGOL 60 implementations timeline

To date there have been at least 70 augmentations, extensions, derivations and sublanguages of Algol 60. The Burroughs dialects included special system programming dialects such as ESPOL and NEWP.


Properties

ALGOL 60 as officially defined had no I/O facilities; implementations defined their own in ways that were rarely compatible with each other. In contrast, ALGOL 68 offered an extensive library of ''transput'' (ALGOL 68 parlance for Input/Output) facilities. ALGOL 60 provided two evaluation strategies for
parameter A parameter (), generally, is any characteristic that can help in defining or classifying a particular system (meaning an event, project, object, situation, etc.). That is, a parameter is an element of a system that is useful, or critical, when ...
passing: the common call-by-value, and call-by-name. The procedure declaration specified, for each formal parameter, which was to be used: value specified for call-by-value, and omitted for call-by-name. Call-by-name has certain effects in contrast to call-by-reference. For example, without specifying the parameters as ''value'' or ''reference'', it is impossible to develop a procedure that will swap the values of two parameters if the actual parameters that are passed in are an integer variable and an array that is indexed by that same integer variable. Think of passing a pointer to swap(i, A in to a function. Now that every time swap is referenced, it's reevaluated. Say i := 1 and A := 2, so every time swap is referenced it'll return the other combination of the values ( ,2 ,1 ,2and so on). A similar situation occurs with a random function passed as actual argument. Call-by-name is known by many compiler designers for the interesting " thunks" that are used to implement it.
Donald Knuth Donald Ervin Knuth ( ; born January 10, 1938) is an American computer scientist, mathematician, and professor emeritus at Stanford University. He is the 1974 recipient of the ACM Turing Award, informally considered the Nobel Prize of computer ...
devised the " man or boy test" to separate compilers that correctly implemented "
recursion Recursion (adjective: ''recursive'') occurs when a thing is defined in terms of itself or of its type. Recursion is used in a variety of disciplines ranging from linguistics to logic. The most common application of recursion is in mathematic ...
and non-local references." This test contains an example of call-by-name.


ALGOL 60 Reserved words and restricted identifiers

There are 35 such reserved words in the standard Burroughs large systems sub-language: There are 71 such restricted identifiers in the standard Burroughs large systems sub-language: and also the names of all the intrinsic functions.


Standard operators


Examples and portability issues


Code sample comparisons


ALGOL 60

procedure Absmax(a) Size:(n, m) Result:(y) Subscripts:(i, k); value n, m; array a; integer n, m, i, k; real y; comment The absolute greatest element of the matrix a, of size n by m, is copied to y, and the subscripts of this element to i and k; begin integer p, q; y := 0; i := k := 1; for p := 1 step 1 until n do for q := 1 step 1 until m do if abs(a
, q The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
> y then begin y := abs(a
, q The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
; i := p; k := q end end Absmax Implementations differ in how the text in bold must be written. The word 'INTEGER', including the quotation marks, must be used in some implementations in place of integer, above, thereby designating it as a special keyword. Following is an example of how to produce a table using Elliott 803 ALGOL: FLOATING POINT ALGOL TEST' BEGIN REAL A,B,C,D' READ D' FOR A:= 0.0 STEP D UNTIL 6.3 DO BEGIN PRINT ,££L??' B := SIN(A)' C := COS(A)' PRINT ,,,A,B,C' END' END'


ALGOL 60 family

Since ALGOL 60 had no I/O facilities, there is no portable hello world program in ALGOL. The following program could (and still will) compile and run on an ALGOL implementation for a Unisys A-Series mainframe, and is a straightforward simplification of code taken from The Language Guide at the
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-Dearborn Computer and Information Science Department Hello world! ALGOL Example Program page. BEGIN FILE F(KIND=REMOTE); EBCDIC ARRAY E :11 REPLACE E BY "HELLO WORLD!"; WRITE(F, *, E); END. Where * etc. represented a format specification as used in FORTRAN, e.g. A simpler program using an inline format: An even simpler program using the Display statement: An alternative example, using Elliott Algol I/O is as follows. Elliott Algol used different characters for "open-string-quote" and "close-string-quote", represented here by and . Here's a version for the Elliott 803 Algol (A104) The standard Elliott 803 used 5-hole paper tape and thus only had upper case. The code lacked any quote characters so £ (pound sign) was used for open quote and ? (question mark) for close quote. Special sequences were placed in double quotes (e.g. £L?? produced a new line on the teleprinter). HIFOLKS' BEGIN PRINT £HELLO WORLD£L??' END' The ICT 1900 series Algol I/O version allowed input from paper tape or punched card. Paper tape 'full' mode allowed lower case. Output was to a line printer. Note use of '(', ')', and %. 'PROGRAM' (HELLO) 'BEGIN' 'COMMENT' OPEN QUOTE IS '(', CLOSE IS ')', PRINTABLE SPACE HAS TO BE WRITTEN AS % BECAUSE SPACES ARE IGNORED; WRITE TEXT('('HELLO%WORLD')'); 'END' 'FINISH'


See also

*
ABC ALGOL ABC ALGOL is an extension of the programming language ALGOL 60 with arbitrary data structures and user-defined operators, intended for computer algebra In mathematics and computer science, computer algebra, also called symbolic computation or ...
*
ALGOL ALGOL (; short for "Algorithmic Language") is a family of imperative computer programming languages originally developed in 1958. ALGOL heavily influenced many other languages and was the standard method for algorithm description used by th ...
*
ALGOL 58 ALGOL 58, originally named IAL, is one of the family of ALGOL computer programming languages. It was an early compromise design soon superseded by ALGOL 60. According to John Backus The Zurich ACM-GAMM Conference had two principal motives in p ...
* ALGOL N *
ALGOL 68 ALGOL 68 (short for ''Algorithmic Language 1968'') is an imperative programming language that was conceived as a successor to the ALGOL 60 programming language, designed with the goal of a much wider scope of application and more rigorously ...
*
ALGOL W ALGOL W is a programming language. It is based on a proposal for ALGOL X by Niklaus Wirth and Tony Hoare as a successor to ALGOL 60. ALGOL W is a relatively simple upgrade of the original ALGOL 60, adding string, bitstring, complex number a ...
* ALGOL X * Atlas Autocode * Coral 66 * Edinburgh IMP * Jensen's Device * ISWIM * JOVIAL * NELIAC *
Simula Simula is the name of two simulation programming languages, Simula I and Simula 67, developed in the 1960s at the Norwegian Computing Center in Oslo, by Ole-Johan Dahl and Kristen Nygaard. Syntactically, it is an approximate superset of AL ...
* S-algol * Scheme (programming language)


References


Further reading

* * The design of the Whetstone Compiler. One of the early published descriptions of implementing a compiler. See the related papers
Whetstone Algol Revisited
an
The Whetstone KDF9 Algol Translator
by Brian Randell


External links


Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language Algol 60
by Peter Naur, et al. ALGOL definition * A BN

of ALGOL 60
"The Emperor's Old Clothes"
– Hoare's 1980 ACM Turing Award speech, which discusses ALGOL history and his involvement
MARST
a free Algol-to-C translator
An Implementation of ALGOL 60 for the FP6000
Discussion of some implementation issues. * * Edinburgh University wrote compilers for Algol60 (later updated for Algol60M) based on their Atlas Autocode compilers initially bootstrapped from the Atlas to the KDF-9. The Edinburgh compilers generated code for the ICL1900, the ICL4/75 (an IBM360 clone), and the ICL2900. Here is th
BNF for Algol60
and th



, an
a considerable test suite
includin
Brian Wichmann's tests.
Also there is a rather superficia
Algol60 to Atlas Autocode source-level translator
. * Eric S. Raymond'
Retrocomputing Museum
among others a link to the NASE Algol-60 interpreter written in C.
The NASE interpreter
* Stories of the B5000 and People Who Were There: a dedicated ALGOL compute

*
NUMAL
A Library of Numerical Procedures in ALGOL 60 developed at The Stichting Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica ( legal successor (organization), legal successor of Stichting Mathematisch Centrum
legal owner

Algol 60 resources: translators, documentation, programs


included in Racket. {{DEFAULTSORT:Algol Algol programming language family Academic programming languages Procedural programming languages Structured programming languages Systems programming languages Programming languages created in 1960 Articles with example ALGOL 60 code Programming languages with an ISO standard