SAKO | |
---|---|
Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: structured, imperative (procedural), array |
Designed by | Leon Łukaszewicz, Antoni Mazurkiewicz, Jan Borowiec, Jowita Koncewicz, Maria Łącka, Stefan Sawicki, Jerzy Swianiewicz, Piotr Szorc, Alfred Szurman and Andrzej Wiśniewski[1] |
Developer | Polish Academy of Sciences |
First appeared | 1960 |
Influenced by | |
Fortran[2] |
SAKO (PL: System Automatycznego KOdowania[3] - EN: An Automatic Coding System[4]) is a Polish language-based programming language written between 1959 and 1960 by a team from the ZAM division of the Polish Academy of Sciences.[1] Originally developed for the XYZ and ZAM-2 computers, it was also ported over to the ZAM-21, ZAM-41 and the Mińsk-22.[5]
General features of the SAKO language:
It had a static address allocation. It was possible to insert code in SAS macro assembler. The compilation proceeded in two stages:
The most characteristic feature of SAKO are Polish commands, e.g. CZYTAJ, SKOCZ DO. It was designed primarily for programming numerical calculations.
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