Business application language

Business Application Language (BAL) refers to one of many offshoots of the BASIC language and should not be confused with IBM's well-established Basic assembly language.

History

Business Application Language was originally defined by Honeywell in 1973 and the major diffusion was in their system '80-'90 in Europe with the work of French firm Prologue S.A. that used BAL for programming on their proprietary Operative System (Prologue).

In 1986 the language was ported to the Unix platform by GuyPes. The first development environment, named Balix, are distributed starting in 1988 in Italy and France. A different evolution path was made by Prologue S.A., named ABAL, in 1992.

The evolution of Balix, developed in Italy, is called B2U[1] (an acronym for Business under UNIX) developed by GuyPes, and are used for a Banking Information System that are used by one hundred banks in Italy.

References

  1. ^ Guido ing. Pes (PN/Italy) (10 October 2008). "Introduzione". Business under Unix (B2U) (in Italian). Archived from the original on 22 July 2011.

External links

  • GuyPes: http://www.guypes.it
  • GuyPes B2U: http://b2u.guypes.it/
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Dialects of the BASIC programming language (list)
Classic
Microsoft
  • Microsoft BASIC
  • TRS-80 BASICs (Level I, Level II/III)
  • Thomson BASIC 1.0
Texas Instruments
  • TI-BASIC (calculators)
  • TI Extended BASIC (aka XBasic)
  • TI-BASIC 83
Hewlett-Packard
  • HP Time-Shared BASIC
  • Rocky Mountain BASIC
  • HP Basic
Locomotive Software
Microcomputers
Minicomputers
Time-sharing computers
Other
Extenders
Procedure-
oriented
Proprietary
Free and
open source
With object
extensions
Proprietary
Free and
open source
RAD
designers
Proprietary
Free and
open source
Defunct


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