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Atlas and Autocode
** Atlas Autocode, a programming language developed for the Atlas Computer
* Atlas Autocode
* 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.
Also there is a rather superficial Algol60 to Atlas Autocode source-level translator.
Atlas Autocode included a < code >< u > complex </ u ></ code > data type which would support complex numbers, partly because of pressure from the electrical engineering department, as complex numbers are used to represent the behavior of alternating current.
The < code >< u > complex </ u ></ code > data type was dropped when Atlas Autocode later morphed into the Edinburgh IMP programming language.
) The language is described in detail in the Atlas Autocode Reference Manual.
Other Flexowriter characters that were found a use in Atlas Autocode were: in floating-point numbers, e. g. for modern ; to mean " the second half of an Atlas memory word "; for the mathematical pi number.
When AA was ported to the English Electric KDF9 computer, the character set was changed to ISO and that compiler has been recovered from an old paper tape by the Edinburgh Computer History Project and is available online, as is a high-quality scan of the original Edinburgh version of the Atlas Autocode manual.
* Atlas Autocode Reference Manual
ms: Atlas Autocode
Bratley first became interested in self-reproducing programs after seeing the first known such program written in Atlas Autocode at Edinburgh in the 1960s by the University of Edinburgh lecturer and researcher Hamish Dewar.
The first compiler-compiler to use that name was written by Tony Brooker in 1960 and was used to create compilers for the Atlas computer at the University of Manchester, including the Atlas Autocode compiler.
Atlas Autocode
# redirect Atlas Autocode
* Atlas Autocode
# REDIRECT Atlas Autocode
* Source Code for KDF9 port of Atlas Autocode compiler
Slightly different dialects of Mercury Autocode were implemented for the Ferranti Atlas ( distinct from the later Atlas Autocode ) and the ICT 1300 and 1900 range.

Atlas and AA
* British Automobile Association ( AA ), ( 1978 ), Complete Atlas of Britain, ISBN 0-86145-005-1
* British Automobile Association ( AA ), ( 1978 ), Complete Atlas of Britain, ISBN 0-86145-005-1

Atlas and was
Incidentally, there was an Atlas firing last night.
** Atlas III was a US launch vehicle ( 2000 – 2005 )
* " Atlas " was the former name for ASP. NET AJAX, Microsoft software, a set of ASP. NET extensions providing Ajax functionality
* STN Atlas Elektronik GmbH was a German defence company producing electronics until 2003
** Atlas Carver, a South African military jet development project that was cancelled in the 1990s
The eldest of these, Atlas, was made rightful king of the entire island and the ocean ( called the Atlantic Ocean in his honor ), and was given the mountain of his birth and the surrounding area as his fiefdom.
In some versions ( but not in the original Atlas version ), for the sake of easy typing it was possible to strop keywords by placing a "" sign in front of them, for example the keyword < code >< u > endofprogramme </ u ></ code > could be typed as or
Atlas Autocode's syntax was influenced by the output device which the author had available, a Friden Flexowriter.
Atlas Autocode's second-greatest claim to fame ( after being the progenitor of Imp and EMAS ) was that it had many of the features of the original " Compiler Compiler ".
In the mid-1960s, a successor to the EDSAC 2 was planned, but the move was instead made to the Titan, a prototype Atlas 2 — the latter having been developed from the Atlas Computer of the University of Manchester, Ferranti, and Plessey.
Herbert George Wells was born at Atlas House, 46 High Street, Bromley, in the county of Kent, on 21 September 1866.
Things changed in 1953 with the Soviet testing of their first hydrogen bomb, but it was not until 1954 that the Atlas missile program was given the highest national priority.
The first armed version of the Atlas, the Atlas D, was declared operational in January 1959 at Vandenberg, although it had not yet flown.
Examples include R-7, Atlas, Redstone, Titan, and Proton, which was derived from the earlier ICBMs but never deployed as an ICBM.

Atlas and language
On February 21, 2009 International Mother Language Day has been marked with the publication of a new edition of the " Atlas of the World ’ s Languages in Danger " by UNESCO where the Western Armenian language in Turkey is defined as a definitely endangered language.
On February 20, 2009, the new edition of UNESCO ’ s Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger classified Patua as a " critically endangered " language.
The Poitevin-Santongese language appears in the list of languages of the international Atlas 2009 of endangered languages, published by UNESCO.
According to the UNESCO Interactive Atlas of the World ’ s Languages in Danger, Gwich ’ in is now a " severely endangered " language with fewer than 150 fluent speakers in Alaska and another 250 in northwest Canada.
The Atlas consists of over 140 maps, each displaying a particular language feature – for example order of adjective and noun – for between 120 and 1370 languages of the world.
UNESCO ’ s Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger designates Kumaoni as language in the unsafe category and which requires consistent conservation efforts.
* Atlas language tree
UNESCO ’ s Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger designates Garhwali as a language which is in the unsafe category and requires consistent conservation efforts.
It is most closely related to the Atlas languages, but heavily influenced by the neighboring Rifian language ; Blench ( 2006 ) classifies it as a dialect of Mzab – Wargla within the Zenati languages.
Blida pronvince has long time been the home of a cluster of Berber-speaking populations, namenly known Djebailia, Beni Salah and Beni Misrah, their Amazigh dialect known as Tamazight of Atlas Blida is particularly close to the Kabylian varieties spoken at the east of the Algiers province and has traditionally been an intermediate between its and the Chenoua language of the western part of the country.
A version was developed for the successor Titan ( the prototype Atlas 2 computer ) as a temporary stop-gap while a more substantially advanced language known as CPL was being developed.
Juhuri is an endangered language classified as " definitely endangered " by UNESCO's Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.
UNESCO ’ s Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger designates Kumaoni as language in the unsafe category and which requires consistent conservation efforts.
UNESCO ’ s Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger designates Garhwali as a language which is in the unsafe category and requires consistent conservation efforts.
In January 2011, UNESCO addded the Jeju dialect to its Atlas of the World ’ s Languages in Danger, along with the Koro language in India as a " critically endangered language ".
Menier was the author of several works on fiscal and economic questions, notably L ' impôt sur le capital ( 1872 ), La Réforme fiscale ( 1872 ), Economie rurale ( 1875 ), L ' Avenir économique ( 1875-1878 ), Atlas de la production de la richesse ( 1878 ) and, published in the English language by G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City in 1878, France And The United States: Their Present Commercial Relations Considered With Reference to a Treaty of Reciprocity ( downloadable )
Laning and Zieler described their work as a " system of automatic coding " and the language is very similar to Tony Brooker's Manchester Autocodes, sitting somewhere between Mercury Autocode and Atlas Autocode in complexity.

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