Turing (programming language)
High-level computer programming language / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Turing is a high-level, general purpose programming language developed in 1982 by Ric Holt and James Cordy, at University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada. It was designed to help students taking their first computer science course learn how to code. Turing is a descendant of Pascal, Euclid, and SP/k that features a clean syntax and precise machine-independent semantics.
This article needs to be updated. (December 2021) |
Quick Facts Paradigm, Designed by ...
Paradigm | multi-paradigm: procedural, object-oriented |
---|---|
Designed by | Ric Holt, James Cordy |
Developer | Holt Software Associates |
First appeared | 1982; 42 years ago (1982) |
Final release | 4.1.1
/ November 25, 2007; 16 years ago (2007-11-25) |
Typing discipline | static, manifest |
OS | Microsoft Windows |
Major implementations | |
Turing, TPlus, OpenT | |
Dialects | |
Object-Oriented Turing, Turing Plus | |
Influenced by | |
Euclid, Pascal, SP/k |
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Turing 4.1.0 is the latest stable version. Versions 4.1.1 and 4.1.2 do not emit stand alone .exe files. Versions pre-4.1.0 have outdated syntax and functions.