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         Forth Programming:     more books (75)
  1. Concatenative Programming Languages: Forth, Postscript, Factor, Cat, Hartmann Pipeline, Joy, Colorforth, Concatenative Programming Language
  2. FORTH: A Text and Reference (Prentice-Hall software series) by Mahlon Kelly, Nicholas Spies, 1986-02
  3. Forth Programming Language Family: Forth, 51-Forth, Muf, Open Firmware, Stoic, Colorforth, Gforth, Pforth, Bashforth, Reva Forth
  4. Jupiter Ace: FORTH Programming by Steven Vickers, 1982-12
  5. Stack-Oriented Programming Languages: Forth Programming Language Family, Forth, Postscript, Befunge, 51-Forth, Poplog, Muf
  6. Understanding Forth (An Alfred handy guide)
  7. FORTH by W. P. SALMAN, O. Tisserand, et all 1984
  8. Forth Tools and Applications by Gary Feierbach, Paul Thomas, 1985-03
  9. Forth Application Techniques (4th Edition) by Elizabeth D. Rather, 2006-06-01
  10. The Definitive MacTutor. The Macintosh Programming Journal. Volume 4.
  11. ISO/IEC 15145:1997, Information technology - Programming languages - FORTH by ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22, 2007-08-23
  12. FORTH Fundamentals: v. 2 by C.K. McCabe, 1983-12
  13. Beginning Forth by Paul M. Chirlian, 1984-03
  14. FORTH Applications: Ready to run programs in Forth (Bitfire Books) by S. D. Roberts, 1989-12

21. Forth Programming
The Forth programming webring is for people who are interested in the Forth Programming language, originally invented by Mr. Charles Moore. Forth is a very powerful programming
http://www.webring.org/hub?ring=forth

22. Forth Programming Language
Forth Programming Language search results free library of articles, downloads, tutorials, whitepapers, and more about Forth Programming Language and other technical topics at
http://www.developers.net/tsearch?searchkeys=forth programming language

23. Defensive Programming - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defensive_programming
Defensive programming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation search This article includes a list of references , related reading or external links , but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate (March 2009) Defensive programming is a form of defensive design intended to ensure the continuing function of a piece of software in spite of unforeseeable usage of said software. The idea can be viewed as reducing or eliminating the prospect of Murphy's Law having effect. Defensive programming techniques are used especially when a piece of software could be misused mischievously or inadvertently to catastrophic effect. Defensive programming is an approach to improve software and source code, in terms of:
  • General quality - Reducing the number of software bugs and problems. Making the source code comprehensible - the source code should be readable and understandable so it is approved in a code audit Making the software behave in a predictable manner despite unexpected inputs or user actions.
Contents

24. Forth Programming
Forth programming is the computing programming language originally invented by Mr. Charles Moore. Forth is a very powerful programming language that gives programmers downto-the
http://www.topiccraze.com/topic?topic=forth;id=27

25. Forth Programming
Forth programming is basic command for using at OK prompt with SUN Oracle products
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/24268989/Forth-Programming

26. Automatic Programming - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_programming
Automatic programming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Redirected from Generative programming Jump to: navigation search It has been suggested that Program synthesis be merged into this article or section. ( Discuss Programming paradigms

27. FORTH Programming Language
FORTH Documents FIGFORTH Internals This document is based on notes I wrote while studying the source code of FIG-FORTH. It describes how a FORTH interpreter works internally, and
http://www.jimbrooks.org/forth/
FORTH Programming Language
FORTH Documents
  • "FIG-FORTH Internals"

  • This document is based on notes I wrote while studying the source code of FIG-FORTH.
    It describes how a FORTH interpreter works internally, and mentions the ingenious solutions
    invented in order to assemble a FORTH interpreter.
  • "FORTH Pictured Numeric Output"

  • Brief document about the FORTH syntax for printing numbers.
FORTH HOWTO FORTH Versions White Lightning FORTH by Oasis Software This was an amazing implemention of FORTH for developing games on the Commodore 64.
FORTH Tools
  • hypersrc is a freeware GUI source code browser that supports FORTH (and other programming languages). hypersrc will display FORTH words in a list widget and jump to a FORTH word's location in a source file when clicked.
FORTH WWW Links 32-bit FIG-FORTH As an experiment, I ported 16-bit 8086 FIG-FORTH to the Intel 32-bit 80386 architecture
from which I made three versions for MSDOS, MSDOS box within Windows (DPMI), and OS/2.

28. Concept Programming - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concept_programming
Concept programming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation search Concept programming is a programming paradigm focusing on how concepts , that live in the programmer's head, translate into representations that are found in the code space. This approach was introduced in 2001 by Christophe de Dinechin with the XL Programming Language
Contents
edit Pseudo-metrics
Concept programming uses pseudo-metrics to evaluate the quality of code. They are called pseudo-metrics because they relate the concept space and the code space, with a clear understanding that the concept space cannot be formalized strictly enough for a real metric to be defined. Concept programming pseudo-metrics include:
  • Syntactic noise measures discrepancies between the concept and the syntax used to represent it. For instance, the semi-colon at the end of statements in C can be considered as syntactic noise, because it has no equivalent in the concept space. Semantic noise measures discrepancies between the expected meaning or behavior of the concept and its actual meaning or behavior in the code. For instance, the fact that integer data types overflow (when mathematical integers do not) is a form of semantic noise.

29. Forth Programming | Free Forth Programming | Learn Forth Programming | Forth Pro
Visit for Free Forth Programming learn Forth Programming for free at Academic Tutorials. Also contains Forth Programming Quiz and Forth Programming eBook Downloads. Well
http://www.academictutorials.com/forth/

30. T L Publications • View Topic - Forth Programming Language
T L Forums Programming How do you find the free Fourth Program mentioned in the Fourth Article in the Nuts Volts July/03 edition
http://forum.servomagazine.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=4590

31. Language-oriented Programming - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language-oriented_programming
Language-oriented programming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation search Programming paradigms

32. Forth Programming Books- Free Computer Books
Home of the highest quality Forth programming books all of which are available for free download.
http://www.computer-books.us/forth.php
Forth Programming
Other Free Books!
Business-Software-Books.us

CAD-CAM-Books.us

Computer-Books.us

Database-Books.us
...
A Beginner's Guide To Forth
J.V. Noble Programming Forth Stephen Pelc Thinking Forth Leo Brodie
Non-Book Resources Forth is a programming language and programming environment, initially developed by Charles H. Moore at the US National Radio Astronomy Observatory in the early 1970s. It was formalized in 1977 and standardized by ANSI in 1994. Forth is sometimes spelled in all capital letters following the customary usage during its earlier years, although the name is not an acronym.
A procedural, stack-oriented and reflective programming language without type checking, Forth features both interactive execution of commands (making it suitable as a shell for systems that lack a more formal operating system) and the ability to compile sequences of commands for later execution. Some Forth versions (especially early ones) compile threaded code, but many implementations today generate optimized machine code like other language compilers.
Forth is so named because "the file holding the interpreter was labeled FORTH, for 4th (next) generation software - but the operating system restricted file names to 5 characters."Moore's use of the phrase 4th (next) generation software appears to predate the definition of fourth-generation programming languages; he saw Forth as a successor to compile-link-go third-generation programming languages, or software for "4th generation" hardware, not a 4GL as the term has come to be used.

33. Domain-specific Language - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain-specific_programming_language
Domain-specific language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Redirected from Domain-specific programming language Jump to: navigation search In software development and domain engineering , a domain-specific language DSL ) is a programming language or specification language dedicated to a particular problem domain, a particular problem representation technique, and/or a particular solution technique. The concept isn't new— special-purpose programming languages and all kinds of modeling/specification languages have always existed, but the term has become more popular due to the rise of domain-specific modeling Examples of domain-specific languages include Logo for children, Verilog and VHSIC hardware description languages R and S languages for statistics Mata for matrix programming, Mathematica and Maxima for symbolic mathematics spreadsheet formulas and macros, SQL for relational database queries, YACC grammars for creating parsers regular expressions for specifying lexers , the Generic Eclipse Modeling System for creating diagramming languages, Csound , a language for digital synthesis, and the input languages of GraphViz and GrGen , software packages used for graph layout and graph rewriting The opposite is: Creating a domain-specific language (with software to support it) can be worthwhile if the language allows a particular type of problems or solutions to them to be expressed more clearly than pre-existing languages would allow, and the type of problem in question reappears sufficiently often.

34. Forth Programming Information
Coding Styles Updated Summary of Forth Style Conventions 01/10/2010 by Jay Skeer. Summary of Forth Style Conventions (Plain text version) by Leo Brodie
http://www.forth.org/programming.html
Forth Programming Information
Coding Styles
Updated Summary of Forth Style Conventions - 01/10/2010 by Jay Skeer Summary of Forth Style Conventions Plain text version ) by Leo Brodie Forth Coding Rules Plain text version ) by Paul E. Bennett
Thanks to Andrew Houghton for creating the HTML version of this guideline.
Applications
Forth Scientific Library project information Some useful Forth programming gems
Using Forth for CGI on Web servers
The comments and membership pages use FORMS to handle your input. The programs to handle input from the forms are usually scripts (most often it is perl ) or programs written in C++ . The forms handlers on this website are, of course, written in ANS Forth Forms handler for email Forms handler for joining FIG FIG Home page

35. Forth Programming Language Overview Forth From A Programmer's
Forth Programming Language Overview Forth From A Programmer's Canadian Gateway, Business Guides, Entertainment, Travel. Listing and reviews of Canadian Web sites.
http://www.masterliness.com/a/FORTH.htm
var GLB_RIS='http://www.masterliness.com';var GLB_RIR='/cincshared/external';var GLB_MMS='http://www.masterliness.com';var GLB_MIR='/site/image';GLB_MML='/'; document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); Science People Non User Locations ... Timeline A2('N'); Index: A B C D ... Z A3('s','.','htm','','N');
Home
Forth is a programming language and programming environment . It was initially developed by Chuck Moore at the US National Radio Astronomy Observatory ( NRAO ) during the , formalized as a programming language in , and standardized by ANSI in . It features both interactive execution of commands (making it suitable as a shell for systems that lack a more formal operating system ), as well as the ability to compile sequences of commands into threaded code for later execution. The language is so named because Moore considered it appropriate for fourth-generation computers (i.e. microcomputer s), but the system on which he developed it was limited to five-letter filenames.
1 Overview
Forth offers a standalone programming environment consisting of a stack oriented interactive incremental interpreter compiler . Programming is done by extending the language with 'words' (the term used for Forth subroutine s), which become part of the language once defined. Forth is usually implemented with an

36. Language Oriented Programming: The Next Programming Paradigm > Comments
Brief reference, forum exchange with many insights, links. OSNews.com.
http://www.osnews.com/comments/8950

37. Forth Programming
The Forth programmingis for people who are interested in the Forth Programming language, originally invented by Mr. Charles Moore. Forth is a very powerful programming language
http://www.lotsasites.com/topic?topic=forth

38. Literate Programming
The WikiWiki entry point for related information and discussions.
http://www.c2.com/cgi/wiki?LiterateProgramming

39. Literate Programming -- Propaganda And Tools
Overview of concepts, advocacy, and some ideas for applying LP.
http://vasc.ri.cmu.edu/old_help/Programming/Literate/literate.html
Literate Programming Propaganda and Tools
Table of contents
  • Overview
    Overview
    A Rationale for literate programming
    Literate programming is an approach to programming which emphasises that programs should be written to be read by people as well as compilers. From a purist standpoint, a program could be considered a publishable-quality document that argues mathematically for its own correctness. A different approach is that a program could be a document that teaches programming to the reader through its own example. A more casual approach to literate programming would be that a program should be documented at least well enough that someone could maintain the code properly and make informed changes in a reasonable amount of time without direct help from the author. At the most casual level, a literate program should at least make its own workings plain to the author of the program so that at least the author can easily maintain the code over its lifetime.
    The problem
    Why is this a Good Thing? I suppose it depends on how you feel about programming. In some sense, if one is up against a deadline for getting code finished and working, trying to make a literate program instead of a working program might seem like a very bad idea. However, in a long-term project (code you don't plan to throw away in the near future), literate programming actually seems to pay off (although I have never seen a study to this effect). Why can this style of program development be beneficial?

40. Forth Webring
The Forth Programming Webring Administrative Intranet by Bill Zimmerly of The Forth Programming Webring
http://zforth.com/
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The Forth Programming Webring
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Your humble host, the "ringmaster", is Bill Zimmerly
The Forth Webring graphic is courtesy of Tom Zegub and Leo Wong. F orth is a programming language and philosophy. It provides the programmer with down-to-the-metal control over the hardware as well as the ability to abstract upwards limited only by the programmer's skill and imagination. Thus, it is an ideal way to program a computer at any level from the lowest levels of machine kernel and device driver up to the highest levels of application software packages. O ther programming languages are also general-purpose in nature, but Forth is very different from them in that it is a language without a syntax! (A unique concept that takes getting used to, but once the programmer is used to it, the power of operating without syntax becomes readily apparent.) R ecent developments in the Forth community include the adoption of the ANSI Standard as well as far greater growth of the community itself because of the popularization of the Internet. T his webring is dedicated to the creator of Forth

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