1130 Amtran |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Amtran on the 1130 |
ABACUS 10 |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Data General JOSS |
ABACUS/X |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Data General JOSS dialect |
AID |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
PDP-10 Joss II |
AL |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
The Artificial Language |
AMTRAN |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Automatic Mathematical Translator |
AMTRAN 70 |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Automatic Mathematical Translator |
Anderson 1968 |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
Graphical input language |
ARPAS |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
ATS |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
B |
⊕
1975
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
Netherlands
|
Simple interactive programming environment |
BASE 00 |
⊕
1955
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other US historic
|
⊕
United States
|
SEAC interpreter |
BASIC |
⊕
1963
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Dartmouth Basics
|
⊕
United States
|
Beginners All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code |
BASIC-E |
⊕
1976
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Street basics
|
⊕
United States
|
Eubanks compiler |
BBN JOSS |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
JOSS rewritten at BBN |
Bernstein |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
Maths input language |
Blackwell and Anderson |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
|
BPL |
⊕
1978
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Street basics
|
⊕
South Africa
|
Basic Programming Language |
BRUIN |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other Conversational
|
⊕
United States
|
Conversational PL/I |
CADETRAN |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
CAL |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Course Author Language |
CAL |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Conversational algebraic language |
CAN |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
FOCAL dialect |
CANDE |
⊕
1984
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
Burroughs Command AND Edit interface |
CAS |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
Catalyst |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
|
CFOR |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Non Standard FIV
|
⊕
United States
|
Univac conversational fortran |
CIMPL |
⊕
1971
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other PL/Is
|
⊕
United States
|
|
CINIC |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Street basics
|
⊕
United States
|
DEC teaching subset of BASIC |
CINT |
⊕
1999
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
C/C++ Interpreter |
CITRAN |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Caltech JOSS |
CL |
⊕
1994
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
Control Language |
CLAG |
⊕
1973
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Process interaction
|
⊕
Netherlands
|
Online simulation system |
Colin conversational language |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
|
COMPAX |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Cell-based
|
⊕
India
|
Visual language for the BUBBLE-TALK system |
Comprehensive |
⊕
1953
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Low-level Autocoders
|
⊕
United States
|
MIT Combined interactive and automatic coding system |
CONA |
⊕
1977
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
True ALGOL60s
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
Conversational Algol |
CON-A |
⊕
1978
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
Conversational Algol |
COPAS |
⊕
1981
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Pascals
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
Conversational Pascal |
CPL |
⊕
1964
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other PL/Is
|
⊕
United States
|
Conversational Programming Language |
Culler-Fried System |
⊕
1961
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive mathematics environment |
DAC |
⊕
1960
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Initial Culler system |
DELtran |
⊕
1975
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
FORTRAN IV standard
|
⊕
United States
|
Fortran interpreted to DEL |
DIALOG |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive math using graphics tablet |
DIAMAG |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
True ALGOL60s
|
⊕
International
|
interactive extension of ALGOL |
DIAMAG 2 |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
True ALGOL60s
|
⊕
France
|
Time-sharing Algol 60 |
display-focal |
⊕
1976
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Graphics extensions to focal |
DISPLAYTRAN |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other visual query languages
|
⊕
United States
|
|
DZHOSS |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
Russian Federation
|
Russian cold-war clone of JOSS |
EASY |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS II
|
⊕
United States
|
|
EDIT |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
ESI |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Engineering and Scientific Interpreter |
ESIX |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
ESI extended, JOSS dialect |
FALCON |
⊕
1974
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
Italy
|
|
FFL |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
FIGARO |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
JOSS at Cambridge |
FILECOMP |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS II
|
⊕
United States
|
|
FOCAL |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
FOrmula CALculator. - JOSS family |
FOCAL/F |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
FOCAL for the PDP OS/8 |
FOCAL/RT |
⊕
1976
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
RT FOCAL |
FOCAL-11 |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
PDP-11 version of FOCAL |
FOCAL-12 |
⊕
1975
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
FOCAL for the PDP-12 |
FOCAL-15 |
⊕
1978
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS II
|
⊕
United States
|
FOCAL for the PDP-15 |
FOCAL-69 |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
1969 version of FOCAL |
FOCAL-71 |
⊕
1971
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
1971 version of FOCAL |
FOCAL-81 |
⊕
1981
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
1981 version of FOCAL |
FORALL |
⊕
1980
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Non Standard F77
|
⊕
Australia
|
User-extensible conversational dialect of Fortran |
Force III |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Street basics
|
⊕
United States
|
Conversational FORTRAN 4 |
FORDESK |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Fortran I-III Variants
|
⊕
Australia
|
Interactive FORTRAN II |
FORDESK IV |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Non Standard FIV
|
⊕
Australia
|
Interactive FORTRAN IV |
Galileo |
⊕
1983
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
Italy
|
interactive, strictly-typed data base programming language |
GAMMA |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
Switzerland
|
CERN port of Culler-Fried System |
GNOSIS |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
CAI languages
|
⊕
Sweden
|
|
GRAIL |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Flowcharting language based on JOSS |
GRIP-71 |
⊕
1971
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
GRIP-75 |
⊕
1975
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
GSS |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
Lincoln Lab Graphical Systems Services |
HUGO |
⊕
1980
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other DPLs
|
⊕
United States
|
Online systems language for GEAC |
ICL |
⊕
1994
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
Interactive Control Language |
IMP |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other Conversational
|
⊕
United States
|
Lampson interactive debugging environment |
INTERP |
⊕
1971
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Burroughs conversational system |
ISIS |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
JOSS II dialect |
ISUDS |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Expression oriented
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive simulation language |
JEAN |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United Kingdom
|
|
JOSS |
⊕
1963
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
JOHNNIAC Open Shop System |
JOSS II |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS II
|
⊕
United States
|
Version 2 of JOSS |
JOSTRAN |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
JOSS dialect for writing FORTRAN |
LCC |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
|
Lincoln Reckoner |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive maths at Lincoln Labs |
LPG |
⊕
1989
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
2d shape
|
⊕
Italy
|
Graphical Procedures Language |
LUCIFER |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Experiment control and recording
|
⊕
United States
|
Text manipulation system for experimental results |
MADCAP IV |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
2d maths-oriented system |
MADCAP Terminal Language |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
Terminal language for Maniac |
MADCAP V |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
|
MADCAP VI |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
|
MAP |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Mathematical Analysis Program. |
MOBSSL |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Difference Equations
|
⊕
United States
|
Block-Structured Simulation Language |
MODEL II |
⊕
1979
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Modelling
|
⊕
United States
|
Evolution of Model |
MOMS |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive maths system at UMich |
Mx |
⊕
1994
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Matrix
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive matrix algebra exploration language |
NBS |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Street basics
|
⊕
United States
|
|
Newsqueak |
⊕
1988
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Interface and windowing
|
⊕
United States
|
Windowing/mousing language |
OCL |
⊕
1986
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
Operation Control Language |
OLC |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
UCSB students |
OPAK |
⊕
1968
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other Conversational
|
⊕
United States
|
|
PAF |
⊕
1957
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Strict Early Fortrans
|
⊕
France
|
Conversational programming language |
PIL/I |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive naths system |
PLUM |
⊕
1978
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
United States
|
|
PPL |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Array
|
⊕
United States
|
Polymorphic Programming Language |
Protosynthex II |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Ad hoc query languages
|
⊕
United States
|
Evolution of Protosynthex |
Protosynthex III |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Ad hoc query languages
|
⊕
United States
|
Evolution of Protosynthex |
PS/8 FOCAL |
⊕
1971
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
|
QUIKTRAN |
⊕
1964
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Non Standard FIV
|
⊕
United States
|
FORTRAN-like, interactive with debugging facilities |
RAP |
⊕
1986
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
CAI languages
|
⊕
United States
|
Text processing language for linguistics |
ROBART 1 |
⊕
1981
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
CAI languages
|
⊕
United States
|
Dialogue grammar based on BNF |
ROBART 2 |
⊕
1989
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
CAI languages
|
⊕
United States
|
Dialogue contruction language |
ROSCOE |
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
|
Remote OS Conversational On-line Environment |
RPN/8 |
⊕
1976
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
|
⊕
Italy
|
Interpretive language for CHILD/8 microprocessors |
RUSH |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other PL/Is
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive Dialect of PL/I |
SAC-1 |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
United States
|
Symbolic Algebraic Computing |
SASP I |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Grammar and Syntax-oriented
|
⊕
United States
|
Syntactically Analyzed String Processor |
SCL |
⊕
1962
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Markovs
|
⊕
United States
|
Symbolic Communication Language |
SDL |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Statistical
|
⊕
United States
|
Bell Labs statistical language |
SIGMA |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
Switzerland
|
Interactive maths system based on CFS |
SIGMA 76 |
⊕
1976
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
Switzerland
|
Improved version of SIGMA |
Sirus |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other Conversational
|
⊕
Russian Federation
|
|
SML |
⊕
1969
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
United States
|
MIT interactive maths system |
SPEAKEASY 3 |
⊕
1972
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
United States
|
Version 3 of Speakeasy |
Speakeasy Theta |
⊕
2002
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
United States
|
|
SPEAKEC |
⊕
1977
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
United States
|
|
SPUD |
⊕
1959
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Other Conversational
|
⊕
United States
|
Demonstration language |
STATIST |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Statistical
|
⊕
Australia
|
|
STRINGCOMP |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS I
|
⊕
United States
|
String manipulating JOSS |
SUDAAN |
⊕
1989
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Statistical
|
⊕
United States
|
|
Summer Session |
⊕
1953
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Low-level Autocoders
|
⊕
United States
|
MIT Interactive coding system |
TAM |
⊕
1970
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Multiline
|
⊕
United States
|
2-D input maths language |
TELCOMP |
⊕
1966
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS II
|
⊕
United States
|
Joss variant for remote computing |
The Message System |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Non Standard FIV
|
⊕
United States
|
Dialog-enabling extensions to FORTRAN |
The Oracle |
⊕
1960
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Ad hoc query languages
|
⊕
United States
|
Early QA system |
TINT |
⊕
1963
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Jovials
|
⊕
United States
|
Interpreted JOVIAL dialect |
TOC |
⊕
1967
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Algebraic
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive algebra system |
TOCS |
⊕
1965
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Arithmetic
|
⊕
United States
|
TACT Online Computer System |
TROLL |
⊕
1973
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Forecasting
|
⊕
United States
|
Array language for econometrics |
UNCL |
⊕
1971
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Generation of JOSS II
|
⊕
United States
|
Language for the TEACH system |
Wooldridge |
⊕
1963
|
↓
↑
On-Line
|
⊕
Symbolic
|
⊕
United States
|
Interactive non-numeric algebraic system |