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- ..., pp. 21-30 (1964)</ref> developed at Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1962. SNOBOL is a tool in such areas as natural language translation, linguistics, text The basic data element of SNOBOL is a string of characters. The language has operations for joining and sepa1,014 bytes (156 words) - 06:09, 14 September 2013
- 12 bytes (1 word) - 01:18, 3 February 2008
- Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/SNOBOL]]. Needs checking by a human.457 bytes (58 words) - 20:09, 11 January 2010
- *[[http://www.snobol4.org/ Snobol organization]]62 bytes (7 words) - 06:09, 14 September 2013
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- ..., pp. 21-30 (1964)</ref> developed at Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1962. SNOBOL is a tool in such areas as natural language translation, linguistics, text The basic data element of SNOBOL is a string of characters. The language has operations for joining and sepa1,014 bytes (156 words) - 06:09, 14 September 2013
- *[[http://www.snobol4.org/ Snobol organization]]62 bytes (7 words) - 06:09, 14 September 2013
- Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/SNOBOL]]. Needs checking by a human.457 bytes (58 words) - 20:09, 11 January 2010
- {{r|SNOBOL}}572 bytes (76 words) - 19:58, 11 January 2010
- {{r|SNOBOL}}2 KB (208 words) - 04:24, 12 August 2010
- ...e matching and much more. Regular expressions come from the work done on [[SNOBOL]] by [[Stephen Cole Kleene]] in the 1950s. In the QED editor, [[Ken Thompso2 KB (291 words) - 21:53, 28 December 2008
- {{r|SNOBOL}}3 KB (441 words) - 12:55, 13 November 2014
- ...veloped for manipulating strings, such as <code>[[awk]]</code> and <code>[[Snobol]]</code>. String-handling capability will be found in more and more genera3 KB (514 words) - 08:02, 20 March 2024
- ...rogram execution. An example of an early purely interpreted language is [[Snobol]]. [[LISP]] and [[BASIC]] are also generally interpreted. Purely interprete25 KB (3,897 words) - 01:49, 8 October 2013