FORTH: a text and reference
FORTH: tools and applications
Fifteen programmers, 400 computers, 36,000 sensors and FORTH
Journal of FORTH Application and Research
Developing real time process control in space
Journal of FORTH Application and Research
Use of a Forth-based Prolog for real-time expert systems
Journal of FORTH Application and Research
Library of Forth routines and utilities
Library of Forth routines and utilities
Journal of FORTH Application and Research
Stack computers: the new wave
Structured Programming with go to Statements
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Communications of the ACM
Computer Approximations
The FORTH approach to operating systems
ACM '76 Proceedings of the 1976 annual conference
Starting FORTH
Linear logic and permutation stacks—the Forth shall be first
ACM SIGARCH Computer Architecture News - Special issue: panel sessions of the 1991 workshop on multithreaded computers
A whirlwind tour of FORTH resources
ACM SIGPLAN Notices
Mixed mode execution with context threading
CASCON '05 Proceedings of the 2005 conference of the Centre for Advanced Studies on Collaborative research
Ten years of Forth in ACM Sigplan Notices: part 1
ACM SIGPLAN Notices
Forth & small systems report: potential unrealized: the MicroMED advisor
ACM SIGPLAN Notices
Distributed computing in sensor networks using multi-agent systems and code morphing
ICAISC'12 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Artificial Intelligence and Soft Computing - Volume Part II
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Forth is unique among programming languages in that its development and proliferation has been a grass-roots effort unsupported by any major corporate or academic sponsors. Originally conceived and developed by a single individual, its later development progressed under two significant influences: professional programmers who developed tools to solve application problems and then commercialized them, and the interests of hobbyists concerned with free distribution of Forth. These influences have produced a language markedly different from traditional programming languages.