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The Retrocomputing Museum

http://www.catb.org/retro/

in the history of programming languages. More Algol68 resources can be found at the Software Preservation Group . ADVSYS ADVenture SYStem, another adventure-writing system by Davi
A museum of archaic computer languages

Welcome!

https://aartaka.me/

ed(1) is a versatile programming system. Yet no one talks about metaprogramming and algorithms in it. Now someone did, and that’s me! Line-based Lisp Editing (13 Oct 2025) Not all
A blog of Artyom Bologov, programmer-poet, privacy freak, and eco-activist. Programming, art, F

Stop Writing Dead Programs, Strange Loop 2022

https://jackrusher.com/strange-loop-2022/

aspects of programming to create an overall experience. The language semantics, user interface, and implementation each help create this integrated experience.” ( source ) 00:29.0

POSIX Shell Tutorial

https://www.grymoire.com/Unix/Sh.html

of POSIX shell programming. The information describe here should work in all(?) POSIX shells. However, your operating system may cause different results. You're not getting the mo
The Grymoire's tutorial on the POSIX Shell

- SoftSynth

http://softsynth.com/pforth/pf_tut/

comments. When you are programming, of course, we encourage the use of comments and stack diagrams to make your code more readable. In this manual, we often indicate stack diagram

Don’t Use ISO/IEC 14977 Extended Backus-Naur Form (EBNF)

https://dwheeler.com/essays/dont-use-iso-14977-ebnf.html

a language (such as a programming language or complex data structure) it’s often helpful to use some kind of Extended Backus-Naur form (EBNF). Often people do a Google searc
A description of why you should not use ISO

Linux Gazette Index

https://www.linuxdoc.org/LDP/LG/lg_index.html

Spiel Linux Socket Programming In C++ , by Rob Tougher Play with the Lovely Netcat , by zhaoway The Back Page Table of Contents December 2001 Issue #73 The MailBag More 2-Cent Tip

The Rule of Least Power

https://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/leastPower.html

many ways in which a programming language may exhibit power or complexity, nor to suggest that all such power necessarily interferes with information reuse. Rather, this finding o


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