Category:SASL: Difference between revisions

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{{language|SASL
SASL (from St Andrews Static Language, alternatively St Andrews Standard Language) is a purely functional programming language developed by David Turner at the University of St Andrews in 1972, based on the applicative subset of ISWIM.[1] In 1976 Turner redesigned and reimplemented it as a non-strict (lazy) language. In this form it was the foundation of Turner's later languages KRC and Miranda, but SASL appears to be untyped whereas Miranda has polymorphic types.
|site=https://github.com/patrickbr/saslcompiler GitHub}}
SASL (from St Andrews Static Language, alternatively St Andrews Standard Language) is a purely functional programming language developed by David Turner at the University of St Andrews in 1972, based on the applicative subset of ISWIM.[1]<br/> In 1976 Turner redesigned and reimplemented it as a non-strict (lazy) language. In this form it was the foundation of Turner's later languages KRC and Miranda, but SASL appears to be untyped whereas Miranda has polymorphic types.<br/>
The manual is available on [https://web.archive.org/web/20150402133901/http://www.eis.mdx.ac.uk/staffpages/dat/saslman.pdf the wayback machine] and a compiler on [https://github.com/patrickbr/saslcompiler GitHub].
 
For further information, see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SASL_(programming_language) Wikipedia] and the links therein.
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