This page (revision-60) was last changed on 03-Feb-2023 15:21 by Andreas Tartz 

This page was created on 10-Apr-2010 11:34 by Carsten Strotmann

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Page revision history

Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
60 03-Feb-2023 15:21 2 KB Andreas Tartz to previous
59 02-Jun-2021 18:06 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
58 02-Aug-2020 20:37 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last
57 02-Aug-2020 20:36 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last
56 29-Jul-2020 21:57 2 KB Peter Dell to previous | to last TURBO-BASIC XL ==> Turbo-BASIC XL
55 18-Apr-2020 20:01 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
54 18-Apr-2020 20:00 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
53 18-Apr-2020 19:40 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last TURBO-BASIC XX ==> TURBO-BASIC XL
52 18-Apr-2020 19:39 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last TURBO-BASIC XL ==> TURBO-BASIC XX
51 23-Sep-2019 22:27 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
50 06-May-2019 05:29 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
49 10-Sep-2018 02:55 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
48 10-Sep-2018 02:55 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
47 10-Sep-2018 02:54 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
46 10-Sep-2018 02:53 2 KB Roland B. Wassenberg to previous | to last
45 15-May-2018 12:38 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
44 15-May-2018 12:38 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
43 14-May-2018 13:43 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
42 14-May-2018 13:42 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last
41 14-May-2018 13:42 2 KB Maury Markowitz to previous | to last

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At line 3 changed one line
In computer programming, BASIC (an acronym for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) is a family of high-level programming languages. The original BASIC was designed in 1964 by John George Kemeny and Thomas Eugene Kurtz at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, USA to provide computer access to non-science students. At the time, nearly all use of computers required writing custom software, which was something only scientists and mathematicians tended to be able to do. The language and its variants became widespread on microcomputers in the late 1970s and 1980s.
[BASIC|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BASIC] (an acronym for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) is a family of high-level programming languages. The [original BASIC|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dartmouth_BASIC] was designed in 1964 by John George Kemeny and Thomas Eugene Kurtz at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, USA to provide computer access to non-science students. Many versions of BASIC, with widely differing features and syntax, emerged during the 1960s and 70s.
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[Wikipedia on BASIC|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BASIC]
The introduction of the [Altair 8800|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altair_8800] in 1975 led Gates and Allen to form Microsoft to make a BASIC interpreter for that platform. They were most familiar with [BASIC-PLUS|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BASIC-PLUS] from the PDP-11, and patterned their new BASIC on that version. Many now-common features, like the LEFT/RIGHT/MID string handling, come from BASIC-PLUS. From that point on, Microsoft BASIC has been the standard by which all are measured.
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Basic versions for the Atari Computers
The Atari 8-bit machines were originally game consoles but switched to be home computers while they were being designed. This led to a need for BASIC on the platform. Atari licensed MS BASIC, but could not get it to fit into an 8kB ROM, which was all that was available at the time. They turned to Shepardson Microsystems, who produced [Atari BASIC] to fill this need. Atari BASIC had many differences from the MS BASICs of the era, and the Atari was always unique in this regard.
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* [Turbo Basic]
* [Atari Basic]
* [Basic XL]
* [Basic XE]
* [Microsoft Basic]
* [Altirra Basic]
Atari BASIC was ''very'' slow, much slower than BASIC running on other home computers that were (otherwise) slower than the Atari. This led to a profusion of new BASICs for the platform, perhaps unlike any other 8-bit machine of the era. The release of [Turbo-BASIC XL] in 1985 was something like a bomb going off, largely replacing Atari BASIC wholescale. There was really nothing similar in the Commodore or Apple II markets, where there were lots of basics but most remained obscure.
Development continues; [Altirra Basic], [Basic++] and [FastBasic] were all written in the 2010s, and they will likely not be the last.
!!Basic versions for Atari 8 bit computers in order of production year
* [Atari BASIC]
* [Microsoft Basic I]
* [Microsoft Basic II]
* [OSS Basic A+]
* [OSS Basic XL|Basic XL]
* [OSS Basic XE|Basic XE]
* [OSS Integer Basic|OSS Integer Basic]
* [Turbo-BASIC XL|Turbo-BASIC XL]
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* [Enhanced Basic]
* [BASICODE]
* [Altirra Basic]
* [U-Basic]
* [CTH-FastBasic]
* [Advan Basic]
* [Basic++|Basic plus plus]
* [FastBasic]
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!!Basic related
* Ken's Super BASIC - loadable extensions for Atari BASIC, no longer available.
* [Enhancements to Basic 2.1]
* [TURBAN] ; TURboBAsic Nifty. Smartest IDE for BASIC for the Atari.
!!Basic references
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* [The Battle of The Basic's by Tom Hunt 1992|The Battle of The Basic_s-Tom Hunt.txt]
* Some thoughts on the "[Ultimate Basic]"