| R. Morrison. S-Algol: a simple Algol. BCS Computer Bulletin, 2(31):17--20, 1982. |
....and data structure pickling as well as more sophisticated transparent mechanisms. The most sophisticated form of persistence is known as orthogonal persistence. The idea of persistent programmingappeared in 1980. Atkinson and Morrison took an existing simple programming language (S Algol[28]) and extended it to support persistence. The result was PS Algol[3] the first persistent programming language. Atkinson et al.[1] proposed the following two principles for languages that support persistent programming: The Principle of Persistence Independence: The persistence of a data object ....
R. Morrison. S-Algol: a simple Algol. BCS Computer Bulletin, 2(31):17--20, 1982.
.... persist between executions of a program. To quote Dearle (Dearle 1994) The idea behind persistence is a simple one: data should be able to persist (survive) for as long as that data is required. In 1980, Atkinson together with Morrison took an existing simple programming language (SAlgol (Morrison 1982)) and extended it to support persistence. The result was PS Algol (Atkinson, Chisholm, and Cockshott 1981) the first persistent programming language. Atkinson et al. (Atkinson, Bailey, Chisholm, Cockshott, and Morrison 1983) have proposed the following two principles for languages that support ....
Morrison, R. (1982). S-Algol: a simple algol. BCS Computer Bulletin 2 (31), 17--20.
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