SNOBOL
Appearance
SNOBOL (String Oriented symbolic Language) is an unstructured, imperative programming language mainly intended for text processing and pattern matching, that was first designed and implemented at Bell Laboratories. SL4 and The Icon programming language are later developments of the SNOBOL language that add Pascal like structured elements to the language but have less powerful pattern matching features.
History
SNOBOL was developed by David J. Farber, Ralph E. Griswold and Ivan P. Polonsky at Bell Labs in 1962. An implementation with built-ins was SNOBOL2 in 1964. Programmer defined functions were added 1965 to SNOBOL3. Work on SNOBOL4 began in 1966.
Implementations
- Catspaw SPITBOL-386 for OS/2 (specsheet)
- DOS
- Catspaw SNOBOL4+ - also available for CP/M-86
- Catspaw Vanilla SNOBOL4 - Commercial - Free
- Catspaw SPITBOL-386 for DOS
- IBM/PC Macro SPITBOL
- Minnesota SNOBOL4
Publications
- R.E. Griswold, J.F. Page, I.P. Polonski: The SNOBOL4 Programming Language - Prentice-Hall 1968, ISBN 0-13-815357-4
- PDF (2nd Edition) 1971, ISBN 0-13-815373-6
- Griswold: A SNOBOL4 Primer - Prentice-Hall, 1973. ISBN 0-13-815381-7
- Maurer: The Programmer's Introduction to SNOBOL - Elsevier, 1976. ISBN 0-444-00172-7
- James F. Gimpel: Algorithms in SNOBOL4 - 1976, ISBN 0-939793-00-8
- Susan Hockey: SNOBOL Programming for the Humanities - Clarendon Press 1985, ISBN 0-19-824676-5
- Michael G. Shafto: Artificial Intelligence Programming in SNOBOL4 - 1987