ALS Prolog: Difference between revisions
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A commercial [[Prolog]] implementation for [[DOS]] originally introduced in 1985 that was later ported to sundry [[UNIX]] like systems, [[Apple Macintosh]] and [[MS Windows]] and has since been open sourced. It features an incremental native code compiler, a two way [[C]] and [[Objective-C]] language interface, a source code trace debugger and more. | A commercial [[Prolog]] implementation for [[DOS]] originally introduced in 1985 that was later ported to sundry [[UNIX]] like systems, [[Apple Macintosh]] and [[MS Windows]] and has since been open sourced. It features an incremental native code compiler, a two way [[C]] and [[Objective-C]] language interface, a source code trace debugger and more. | ||
The package is primarily a intended for use with the command line but does come with [[Tcl/Tk]] based windowed user interface. | The package is primarily a intended for use with the command line but does come with [[Tcl/Tk]] based windowed user interface that is a tad outdated. | ||
Note that a number of older target systems are missing from the current open source release and would need to be recreated, the only currently supported systems are 32 bit Windows and Linux. | Note that a number of older target systems are missing from the current open source release and would need to be recreated, the only currently supported systems are 32 bit Windows and Linux. |
Revision as of 16:35, 6 June 2016
A commercial Prolog implementation for DOS originally introduced in 1985 that was later ported to sundry UNIX like systems, Apple Macintosh and MS Windows and has since been open sourced. It features an incremental native code compiler, a two way C and Objective-C language interface, a source code trace debugger and more.
The package is primarily a intended for use with the command line but does come with Tcl/Tk based windowed user interface that is a tad outdated.
Note that a number of older target systems are missing from the current open source release and would need to be recreated, the only currently supported systems are 32 bit Windows and Linux.
Links
Licence
Originally a commercial software package release under a proprietary licence, currently an open source project released under the MIT Licence.
Publisher
- Applied Logic Systems, Inc.