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Forth: Difference between revisions

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* [[GForth]] - Open source - Discontinued.
* [[GForth]] - Open source - Discontinued.
* [[Golden Porcupine Forth]] - Shareware - Discontinued.
* [[Golden Porcupine Forth]] - Shareware - Discontinued.
* [[HENCE4TH]] - Open source - Discontinued.
* [[Hierarchical Music Specification Language]] - Commercial - Discontinued.
* [[HS/FORTH]] - Commercial - Discontinued.
* [[HS/FORTH]] - Commercial - Discontinued.
* [[LMI Forth-83]] - Commercial - Discontinued - Cross development tool that runs on top of UR/FORTH.
* [[LMI Forth-83]] - Commercial - Discontinued - Cross development tool that runs on top of UR/FORTH.

Revision as of 02:18, 16 January 2015

Description

Imperative, hierarchical stack based language with an almost quasi-religious following. Like so many languages at the time FORTH was initially spelled all caps, but it had become the custom to spell it as a noun as early as the mid 70's, unlike most contemporary languages.

A list of OS/2 implementations of Forth

Libraries, extensions and bindings

Editors with Forth support

A list of DOS implementations of Forth

A list of Forth implementations that run under WinOS/2

A list of Forth implementations that run under Java

A list of Forth implementations in JavaScript

Publications

  • Byte Magazine August 1980 - Harks from a time when Byte used to have language specific issues, this one is the Forth issue and has a couple of now classic articles.

Local articles

Code snippets

Tutorials and other learning material

Links

USENET

Built with Forth

Standards

Forth history

  • Invented by Charles H. Moore in 1968.