Poplog

Poplog
Original author(s)Robin Popplestone, Steve Hardy, Chris Mellish, Aaron Sloman, John Williams, Robert Duncan, Simon Nichols, John Gibson
Developer(s)University of Sussex
Systems Designers Ltd.
Integral Solutions Ltd.
University of Birmingham
Initial release1982 (1982)
Stable release
16 / January 2020 (2020-01)
Repositorygetpoplog.github.io
Written inPOP-11
Operating systemCross-platform: VMS, Unix, Linux, Mac OS X, Windows
PlatformVAX, SPARC, IA-32, PowerPC, x86-64
Size17+ MB
Available inEnglish
TypeIDE
LicenseProprietary (1982–1999)
Open-source (1999–present): MITXFree86
Websitewww.cs.bham.ac.uk/research/projects/poplog/poplog.info.html

Poplog is a reflective, incrementally compiled software development computer programming integrated development environment and system platform for the programming languages POP-11, Common Lisp, Prolog, and Standard ML. It was created originally in the United Kingdom for teaching and research in artificial intelligence, at the University of Sussex, and later marketed as a commercial package for software development, teaching, and research. It was one of the initiatives supported for a time by the UK government-funded Alvey Programme.

It was licensed originally from 1982 to 1999, as proprietary software, then released in 1999 as open-source software, under a mix of MIT and then XFree86 licenses.


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