default search action
SIGPLAN Notices, Volume 19
Volume 19, Number 1, January 1984
- Miren Begoña Albizuri-Romero:
A graphical abstract programming language. 14-23 - Neta Amit:
A different solution for improving the readability of deeply nested IF-THEN-ELSE control structure. 24-30 - A. Toni Cohen:
Data abstraction, data encapsulation and object-oriented programming. 31-35 - Dirk Craeynest, Geert Vansteenkiste, Johan Lewi:
Construction of an ELL(1) syntax analyser for Ada with the compiler-generator LILA. 36-45 - Robin B. Hunter:
A system for writing Pascal programs interactively. 46-56 - Raghavendra Rao Loka:
A note on parallel parsing. 57-59 - Luca Majocchi, Luca Rodda, Giacomo R. Sechi:
A technique to obtain effective locality of computation in FORTRAN IV. 60-62 - Lawrence M. Ruane:
Abstract data types in assembly language programming. 63-67 - David Taylor:
A portable pseudo-code for Pascal-like languages. 68-77 - Jan van Katwijk, J. van Someren:
The doublet model: run-time model and implementation of Ada types. 78-92 - C. K. Yuen:
Further comments on the premature loop exit problem. 93-94
Volume 19, Number 2, February 1984
- Miren Begoña Albizuri-Romero:
GRASE: a graphical syntax-directed editor for structured programming. 28-37 - David E. Boddy:
On the design of monitors with priority conditions. 38-46 - D. John Cooke, M. H. J. Al-Noufaly:
The programming language MINO and its formal definition. 47-57 - Harry Feldmann:
An acceptive grammar for the natural language English. 58-67 - Darrel C. Ince:
The provision of procedural and functional interfaces for the maintenance of program design language and program language notations. 68-74 - Gary T. Leavens:
Prettyprinting styles for various languages. 75-79 - Herbert Mayer, Don Perkins:
Towers of Hanoi revisited a nonrecursive surprise. 80-84 - Ana Maria de Alencar Price:
Defining dynamic variables and abstract data types in Pascal. 85-91
Volume 19, Number 3, March 1984
- Mukul Babu Agrawal, Vijay Kumar Garg:
Dimensional analysis in Pascal. 7-11 - Stowe Boyd:
Free and bound generics: two techniques for abstract data types in modular C. 12-20 - Edward Bulman:
What is programming really all about? 21-23 - John L. Callaghan:
A software implemented memory manager. 24-31 - Don Faust:
Run-time declaration elaboration. 32-38 - Vijay Kumar Garg:
Screen-oriented highlevel debugger (SHD) for Pascal. 39-41 - Klaus Gröning:
"Combined actions to reduce LR-parsertables": (experimental results). 42-45 - Wolfgang Hoyer:
Some remarks on records with variants. 46-50 - Francis C. M. Lau, Atul Asthana:
Yet another history mechanism for command interpretors. 51-56 - Salvatore Mamone:
Error free code: is it attainable? 57-60 - John R. Pugh:
Actors: the stage is set. 61-65 - Richard S. Wiener:
A generic sorting module in Modula-2. 66-72 - Richard Wingerter:
A note on determining the complexity of algorithms. 73-78
Volume 19, Number 4, April 1984
- David B. Benepe:
In defense of simplicity of comment syntax. 32-33 - Bill McMullen:
Structured decision tables. 34-43 - Henry C. Thacher Jr.:
On the elimination of pointer variables and dynamic allocation in higher level languages. 44-46
Volume 19, Number 5, May 1984
- William E. Riddle, Peter B. Henderson:
Proceedings of the ACM SIGSOFT/SIGPLAN Software Engineering Symposium on Practical Software Development Environments, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, April 23-25, 1984. ACM 1984, ISBN 0-89791-131-8 [contents]
Volume 19, Number 6, June 1984
- Mary S. Van Deusen, Susan L. Graham:
Proceedings of the 1984 SIGPLAN Symposium on Compiler Construction, Montreal, Canada, June 17-22, 1984. ACM 1984, ISBN 0-89791-139-3 [contents]
Volume 19, Number 7, July 1984
- Irving B. Elliott:
The EPN and ESN notations. 9-17 - H. Kao, T. Y. Chen:
Data flow analysis for Cobol. 18-21 - Raghavendra Rao Loka:
A note on parallel parsing. 22-24 - Karl J. Ottenstein:
Intermediate program representations in compiler construction: a supplemental bibliography. 25-27 - Foreward to the candidate extension library. 28-44
- Foreword to work in progress. 45-64
- Jürgen F. H. Winkler:
Some improvements of ISO-Pascal. 65-78
Volume 19, Number 8, August 1984
- Lawrence A. Rowe, L. Peter Deutsch, Stuart I. Feldman, Butler W. Lampson, Barbara Liskov, Terry Winograd:
Programming language issues for the 1980's: SIGPLAN '83: symposium on programming languages issues in software systems. 51-61 - Roger R. Baldwin:
The backward-directed GO TO in FORTRAN. 62-64 - Hal Berghel, David L. Sallach:
Measurements of program similarity in identical task environments. 65-76 - Joseph D. Brownsmith, Leslie H. Oliver:
Optimizing loops in programs compiled with the IBM PL/I optimizing compiler. 77-84 - Michael A. Covington:
A pedagogical disadvantage of repeat and while. 85-86 - Wm. Randolph Franklin:
A simpler iterative solution to the Towers of Hanoi problem. 87-88 - Darrel C. Ince:
Module interconnection languages and Prolog. 89-93 - Yves L. Noyelle:
String-handling facilities of the LSE language. 94-103 - Scott A. Smolka:
Report on the 6th international symposium on programming. 104-105 - Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Ed Keizer, Hans van Staveren:
Does anybody out there want to write HALF of a compiler? 106-108 - Mark Woodman:
A Program Design Language for software engineering. 109-118 - Kenneth M. Zemrowski:
Differences between ANS and ISO standards for Pascal: ambiguities clarified. 119-126
Volume 19, Number 9, September 1984
- D. Q. M. Fay:
Experiences using Inmos proto-OCCAM (TM). 5-11 - António L. Furtado:
Generalized set comparison. 12-15 - Herbert Mayer:
Experiences porting Pascal source from a micro computer to a Vax. 16-20 - Jaroslaw Milewski:
Loslan implementation of the AMPL message-passing system. 21-29 - Sakti Pramanik, Bernhard Weinberg:
The implementation kit with monitors. 30-33 - Manfred P. Stadel:
Another nonrecursive algorithm for the towers of Hanoi. 34-36 - Jan van Katwijk:
Practical experiences with automatic repair of syntactical errors or syntactical error repair in the DAS compiler. 37-48 - Jürgen F. H. Winkler:
Some improvements of ISO-Pascal. 49-62
Volume 19, Number 10, October 1984
- Jason Gait:
Semaphores outside the kernel. 12-21 - Gebhard Greiter:
acce-specifications: a formal method to define data types. 22-31 - Hausi A. Müller:
Differences between Modula-2 and Pascal. 32-39 - H. Richards:
An overview of ARC SASL. 40-45 - David O. Williams:
Structured transfer of control. 46-51 - David O. Williams:
Alternate returns. 52-57 - H. Zedan:
A note on deadlock-free proofs of network of processes. 58-62
Volume 19, Number 11, November 1984
- Karl Ludwig Pentzlin:
An extension proposal for Pascal: simplifying assignments like "a : = a + 1;" by a "pronoun character". 17 - Linda Rising:
A syntax-directed editor, world-builder and simulator for the language of KAREL the robot. 18-21 - David Rosenthal:
A proposed modification to the absolute coordinates of Logo. 22 - David A. Sewry:
Modula-2 process facilities. 23-32 - David A. Sewry:
Modula-2 and the monitor concept. 33-41 - Thomas N. Turba:
An exception-based mechanism for syntactic error recovery. 42-51 - Robert R. Van Tuyl:
On evolution of FORTRAN. 52-55 - ShouHan Wang:
Some questions about "on the elimination of pointer variables and dynamic allocation in higher level languages". 56-58 - David Zethmayr:
CUL-de-SAC and dramatic EXIT for use in structured languages. 59-62
Volume 19, Number 12, December 1984
- L. Anselmi:
A new programming language: GALILEI. 12-26 - Lem O. Ejiogu:
OPUS #16G software structure: its characteristic polynomials. 27-34 - Dennis P. Geller:
Programming and writing. 35-37 - Bertrand Meyer:
A note on iterative Hanoi. 38-40 - David V. Moffat:
Some concerns aboul Modula-2. 41-47 - David Taylor:
An alternative to current looping syntax. 48-53 - Mladen A. Vouk:
On the cost of mixed language programming. 54-60 - Mark B. Wells, Margaret A. Hug, Roland Silver, John Brockmeyer:
Modcap reference manual. 61-79
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.