POP-2

POP-2
ParadigmMulti-paradigm: structured, reflective, procedural
FamilyLisp: POP
Designed byRobin Popplestone; Rod Burstall, Steve Hardy; Robert Rae, Allan Ramsay
DevelopersUniversity of Edinburgh
University of Sussex
First appeared1970 (1970)
Stable release
1975 / 1975 (1975)
Typing disciplinedynamic
Implementation languageassembly
PlatformElliott 4130, ICT 1909, BESM-6, PDP-10, PDP-11
OSGeorge, TOPS-10, Unix
LicenseProprietary
Major implementations
WPOP
Dialects
POP-10
Influenced by
Lisp, ALGOL 60, COWSEL (renamed POP-1)
Influenced
POP-11

POP-2 (also called POP2) is a programming language developed around 1970 from the earlier language POP-1 (developed by Robin Popplestone in 1968, originally named COWSEL) by Robin Popplestone and Rod Burstall at the University of Edinburgh. It drew roots from many sources: the languages Lisp and ALGOL 60, and theoretical ideas from Peter J. Landin. It used an incremental compiler, which gave it some of the flexibility of an interpreted language, including allowing new function definitions at run time and modification of function definitions while a program runs (both of which are features of dynamic compilation), without the overhead of an interpreted language.[1]

  1. ^ Burstall, R.M.; Collins, J.S.; Popplestone, R.J. (1968). POP-2 Papers (PDF). London: The Round Table.

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