HPL: Vol. II: Imperative Programming Languages, Volume II:Table of Contents
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HPL: Vol. II: Imperative Programming Languages, Volume II
(Imprint: Macmillan Computer Publishing)
(Publisher: Macmillan Technical Publishing)
Author: Peter H. Salus
ISBN: 1578700094
- Foreword to the Handbook of Programming Languages
- About the Author
- Part IFortran
- Chapter 1Fortran
- 1.1. Introduction
- 1.1.1. History
- 1.1.2. Fortran 95the Language of Modern Choice
- 1.1.3. Fortran 90 Compatibility
- 1.1.4. Extensibility
- 1.1.5. The Fortran 95 Language Standard
- 1.1.6. Fortran 2000
- 1.1.7. HPF
- 1.1.8. F
- 1.2. An Overview of the Fortran Language
- 1.2.1. The Form of a Fortran Program
- 1.2.2. The program Statement
- 1.2.3. The end program Statement
- 1.2.4. Intrinsic Data Types
- 1.2.5. Kind Parameters
- 1.2.6. Parameters/Named Constants
- 1.2.7. Rules for Names
- 1.2.8. Variables
- 1.2.9. Attributes
- 1.2.10. Intrinsic Functions
- 1.2.11. Expressions
- 1.2.12. Assignment
- 1.2.13. Control Constructs
- 1.2.14. Modules and Procedures
- 1.2.15. Arrays
- 1.2.16. Character Data
- 1.2.17. Structures and Derived Types
- 1.2.18. Extending Fortran
- 1.2.19. Pointer Variables
- 1.2.20. Input and Output
- 1.3. More Information About Fortran
- 1.4. References
- Part IIC
- Chapter 2The Development of the C Language
- 2.1. Introduction
- 2.2. History
- 2.2.1. The Setting
- 2.2.2. Origins: The Languages
- 2.2.3. More History
- 2.3. The Development of C
- 2.3.1. The Problems of B
- 2.3.2. Embryonic C
- 2.3.3. Neonatal C
- 2.3.4. Portability
- 2.3.5. Growth in Usage
- 2.3.6. Standardization
- 2.3.7. Successors
- 2.3.8. Critique
- 2.4. Whence Success?
- 2.5. Acknowledgments
- 2.6. References
- Chapter 3C Programming
- 3.1. Introduction
- 3.1.1. Sample Programs
- 3.1.2. Lexical Issues
- 3.2. Basic Types, Constants, and Declarations
- 3.2.1. Basic Types
- 3.2.2. Constants
- 3.2.3. Declarations
- 3.2.4. Identifiers
- 3.2.5. Array Declarations
- 3.2.6. Scope, Duration, Linkage, and Storage Classes
- 3.2.7. Type Qualifiers
- 3.2.8. Initialization
- 3.2.9. Type Definitions
- 3.3. Expressions
- 3.3.1. Primary Expressions
- 3.3.2. Arithmetic Operators
- 3.3.3. Assignment Operators
- 3.3.4. Relational and Logical Operators
- 3.3.5. Bitwise Operators
- 3.3.6. Compound Assignment Operators
- 3.3.7. Autoincrement and Autodecrement Operators
- 3.3.8. Conditional and Comma Operators
- 3.3.9. Precedence and Order of Evaluation
- 3.3.10. Default Conversions
- 3.3.11. Explicit Conversions
- 3.3.12. Constant Expressions
- 3.4. Statements
- 3.4.1. Expression Statements
- 3.4.2. if Statements
- 3.4.3. switch Statements
- 3.4.4. while Loops
- 3.4.5. for Loops
- 3.4.6. do/while Loops
- 3.4.7. break and continue
- 3.4.8. goto Statements
- 3.4.9. return Statements
- 3.5. Functions
- 3.5.1. Defining Functions
- 3.5.2. Declaring Functions
- 3.5.3. Calling Functions
- 3.5.4. Global Variables and External Declarations
- 3.6. Pointers and Arrays
- 3.6.1. Pointer Declarations
- 3.6.2. Basic Pointer Operations
- 3.6.3. Pointer Arithmetic
- 3.6.4. Array/Pointer Initialization
- 3.6.5. Array/Pointer Equivalence
- 3.6.6. Memory Allocation
- 3.6.7. Pointers to Functions
- 3.6.8. Low-Level Addressing
- 3.7. User-Defined Data Structures
- 3.7.1. Structures
- 3.7.2. Structure Member Access
- 3.7.3. Unions
- 3.7.4. Bit-Fields
- 3.7.5. Enumerations
- 3.7.6. Linked Data Structures
- 3.8. The C Preprocessor
- 3.8.1. Source File Inclusion #include)
- 3.8.2. Macro Definition (#define)
- 3.8.3. Conditional Compilation (#ifdef, et al.)
- 3.8.4. Special Replacement Operators
- 3.8.5. Other Preprocessor Directives
- 3.9. The Runtime Environment
- 3.9.1. Command-Line Arguments
- 3.9.2. Exit Status
- 3.10. The Standard C Library
- 3.10.1. <stdio.h>
- 3.10.2. <string.h>
- 3.10.3. <ctype.h>
- 3.10.4. <stdlib.h>
- 3.10.5. <math.h>
- 3.10.6. <time.h>
- 3.10.7. <signal.h>
- 3.10.8. <setjmp.h>
- 3.10.9. <locale.h>
- 3.10.10. <stdarg.h>
- 3.10.11. <stddef.h>
- 3.10.12. <assert.h>
- 3.10.13. <errno.h>
- 3.10.14. <limits.h>
- 3.10.15. <float.h>
- 3.10.16. <iso646.h>
- 3.10.17. <wchar.h>
- 3.10.18. <wctype.h>
- 3.11. Acknowledgments
- 3.12. Bibliography
- Part IIIIntermediate Languages
- Chapter 4Intermediate Languages
- 4.1. Overview
- 4.2. Patterns of IL Conception
- 4.2.1. The Extension Pattern
- 4.2.2. The Between Pattern
- 4.3. Principles of IL Design
- 4.4. Case Study
- 4.5. Summary
- 4.6. Acknowledgments
- 4.7. Bibliography
- Part IVPascal
- Chapter 5Turbo Pascal
- 5.1. The History of Pascal
- 5.1.1. Birth
- 5.1.2. Growth
- 5.1.3. Prominence
- 5.1.4. Descendants
- 5.1.5. Today
- 5.1.6. Net Resources
- 5.2. Pascal Constructs
- 5.2.1. Using the Turbo Pascal Compiler
- 5.2.2. Elementary Pascal
- 5.2.3. Control Structures
- 5.2.4. Data Types
- 5.2.5. Procedures and Functions
- 5.2.6. Units, Unit Creation, and Include Files
- 5.2.7. Data Manipulation Procedures and Functions
- 5.2.8. Dynamic Memory Allocation
- 5.2.9. File Access
- 5.2.10. textmode Screen Manipulation
- 5.2.11. DOS Command Capabilities
- 5.2.12. Advanced Options
- 5.3. Common Questions and Answers
- 5.4. References
- PART VIcon
- Chapter 6The Icon Programming Language
- 6.1. Background
- 6.2. The Language
- 6.2.1. Basics
- 6.2.2. Generators and Goal-Directed Evaluation
- 6.2.3. String Processing
- 6.2.4. Structures
- 6.2.5. Numerical Computation
- 6.2.6. Co-Expressions
- 6.2.7. Graphics
- 6.2.8. Running Icon Programs
- 6.2.9. Debugging Facilities
- 6.3. Programming Techniques and Examples
- 6.3.1. Programming with Sequences
- 6.3.2. Pattern Matching
- 6.3.3. Procedures with Memory
- 6.3.4. Visual Interfaces in Icon
- 6.3.5. Anatomy of a Program
- 6.4. Icon Resources
- 6.4.1. Online Access
- 6.4.2. Implementations
- 6.4.3. Documentation
- 6.4.4. The Icon Program Library
- 6.4.5. Icon Newsgroup
- 6.4.6. The Icon Project
- 6.5. Acknowledgments
- 6.6. References
Index
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