BALM
Up one levelMalcolm Harrison had developed an extensible language called BALM with Lisp-like features and Algol-like syntax. BALM was used to implement the first version of SETL.
- Malcolm C. Harrison. BALM - An Extendable List-processing Language. June 1969. by Paul McJones — last modified 2021-02-23 13:30
- Malcolm C. Harrison. BALM - An Extendable List-processing Language. Report NYO-1480-118, AEC Computing and Applied Mathematics Center, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University, June 1969.
- Malcolm C. Harrison, Jeffrey Rubin, and Douglas Albert: BALM Users Manual - Version 3. Courant Institute, New York University, September 1969. by Paul McJones — last modified 2022-12-29 14:34
- Malcolm C. Harrison, Jeffrey Rubin, and Douglas Albert: BALM Users Manual - Version 3. Courant Institute, New York University, September 1969. This copy courtesy of Peter Capek.
- Malcolm Harrison. Chapter 19 (BALM) of Data-structures and programming. Scott, Foresman and Company, 1973. by Paul McJones — last modified 2022-06-06 20:38
- Malcolm Harrison. Chapter 19 (BALM) of Data-structures and programming. Scott, Foresman and Company, 1973.
- Malcolm C. Harrison. BALM Listing. 1973 by Paul McJones — last modified 2022-05-24 09:54
- Malcolm C. Harrison. BALM Listing. Appendix B of Data-structures and programming. Scott, Foresman and Company, 1973. A BALM translator written in BALM.
- Malcolm Harrison and Stephanie Brown. BALM: The BALM programming language, September 1974. by Paul McJones — last modified 2022-11-15 20:20
- Malcolm Harrison and Stephanie Brown. BALM: The BALM programming language. Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University, September 1974. This copy scanned from NYU Library, courtesy of Alex Kennedy-Grant.