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From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (05 January 2017) [foldoc]:
PL/I
Programming Language One.
An attempt to combine the best features of Fortran, COBOL
and ALGOL 60. Developed by George Radin of IBM in 1964.
Originally named NPL and Fortran VI. The result is large but
elegant. PL/I was one of the first languages to have a formal
semantic definition, using the Vienna Definition Language.
EPL, a dialect of PL/I, was used to write almost all of the
Multics operating system. PL/I is still widely used
internally at IBM. The PL/I standard is ANS X3.53-1976.
PL/I has no reserved words. Types are fixed, float,
complex, character strings with maximum length, bit strings,
and label variables. Arrays have lower bounds and may be
dynamic. It also has summation, multi-level structures,
structure assignment, untyped pointers, side effects and
aliasing. Control flow constructs include goto; do-end
groups; do-to-by-while-end loops; external procedures;
internal nested procedures and blocks; generic procedures
and exception handling. Procedures may be declared
recursive. Many implementations support concurrency
('call task' and 'wait(event)' are equivalent to fork/join)
and compile-time statements.
LPI is a PL/I interpreter.
["A Structural View of PL/I", D. Beech, Computing Surveys, 2,1
33-64 (1970)].
(1994-10-25)