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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. XPL is a dialect of the PL/I programming language, developed in 1967, used for the development of compilers for computer languages. It was designed and implemented by a team with William McKeeman, James J. Horning, and David B. Wortman at Stanford University and the University of California, Santa Cruz. It was first announced at the 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference in San Francisco, California. It is the name of both the programming language and the compiler…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. XPL is a dialect of the PL/I programming language, developed in 1967, used for the development of compilers for computer languages. It was designed and implemented by a team with William McKeeman, James J. Horning, and David B. Wortman at Stanford University and the University of California, Santa Cruz. It was first announced at the 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference in San Francisco, California. It is the name of both the programming language and the compiler generator system based on the language. XPL was designed just as PL/I was introduced. IBM, in designing PL/I, had largely abandoned the FORTRAN-flavored language constructs in favor of forms more like ALGOL 60 had in it, so the authors of XPL decided to base XPL on PL/I. XPL was small language whereas PL/I was not.