Philip J. Koopman, Jr. The ENTIRE BOOK is available to read on-line or to download for off-line reading! Published in 1989, this was the first book to explore the new breed of stack computers led by the introduction of the Novix NC4016 chip. The author commences with an overview of how stacks are used in computing, and a taxonomy of hardware stack support which includes a survey of approximately 7
or On some of the differences between Forth and other languages A quine is a program that produces its complete source code as its only output. Developing the shortest non-empty quine in any programming language is often used as a challenge, and the length of the shortest non-empty quine in a language is sometimes seen as reflecting the expressive power of the language. Here, I list some Forth qui
Forth Machine Design Study: Win4k An interactive forth programming environment with OpenGL bindings Click to view screenshot Introduction Win4K is an interactive forth-based programming environment that comes up with its own console. You can write graphics effects in real-time and modify live variables. This software was my first attempt to implement a forth machine. Although it has many limitatio
Thyrd is an experimental, reflective, visual programming language and environment. In Thyrd, both data and code are stored in cells situated in nested two-dimensional grids. The user interface animates the transition from a cell to its subordinate or superordinate grid to help keep the user oriented in the hierarchical grid structure. All operations the user can perform to edit the structure are i
Forth Dimensions The original scanning of Forth Dimensions was done by Ed Thelen in August 2003, for the gang at Harry's Hofbrau. Bob Smith provided the printed documents and assisted in scanning them. A separate scan was done by John Hall. In addition, Jay McKnight used the optical character recognition function of Adobe Acrobat to further process these image files, converting them into the searc
MOVING FORTH Part 1: Design Decisions in the Forth Kernel by Brad Rodriguez This article first appeared in The Computer Journal #59 (January/February 1993). INTRODUCTION Everyone in the Forth community talks about how easy it is to port Forth to a new CPU. But like many "easy" and "obvious" tasks, not much is written on how to do it! So, when Bill Kibler suggested this topic for an article, I deci
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く