Communications of the ACM
Programming Languages: A general purpose graphic language
Communications of the ACM
On the semantics of the assignment statement of high-level graphical languages
SIGGRAPH '76 Proceedings of the 3rd annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Wave: interactive color graphics for waveform analysis
SIGGRAPH '75 Proceedings of the 2nd annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
IMAGE: a language for the interactive manipulation of a graphics environment
SIGGRAPH '75 Proceedings of the 2nd annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
On high-level programming systems for structured display programming
SIGGRAPH '75 Proceedings of the 2nd annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
ESP3: a high-level graphics language
SIGGRAPH '75 Proceedings of the 2nd annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Glide: a language for design information systems
SIGGRAPH '77 Proceedings of the 4th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
GPGS: a device-independent general purpose graphic system for stand-alone and satellite graphics
SIGGRAPH '77 Proceedings of the 4th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Compiler Construction for Digital Computers
Compiler Construction for Digital Computers
A concurrent pascal compiler for minicomputers.
A concurrent pascal compiler for minicomputers.
APLBAGS: an APL basic Graphics subroutine package for the tektronix 4013 storage tube terminal
ACM SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics
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PIGLI (Portable Interactive Graphics Language Interpreter) is a high-level interactive graphics system implemented on an INTERDATA 8/32 minicomputer. PIGLI is written in sequential PASCAL and executes under the SOLO operating system, which is written in concurrent PASCAL and has been shown to be highly portable. This paper describes the major features of the PIGLI system including interactive programming commands, flexible hierarchic picture generation, referencing functions, query commands, exec files, and device independent output commands. In addition, the paper discusses the program design and its relationship to operating system and space considerations.