Norman Lathrop Enterprises  
nleindex.com | Norman Lathrop Enterprises
Index To How To Do It Information
Lathrop Report On Newspaper Indexes
A profile of Norman Lathrop Enterprises
 
NLEIndex.com
Last Updated
03/31/2019
 
Sitemap
 
  Index Home  |   A-Z Subject Heading Guide    |   Keyword Search  |   Union List 

Detailed entries for one subject from the INDEX TO HOW TO DO IT INFORMATION.
Click on a see also (sa) or tracing (xx) to view detailed entries about a related subject.
The entries are in alphabetical order by magazine name and then in chronological sequence.
To obtain a copy of any magazine article contact your local public library or the publisher.

PASCAL COMPUTER LANGUAGE
xx   COMPUTER LANGUAGE

Special issue has several articles on the use of Pascal on microcomputers.
BYTE Aug 1978 (v.3#8) pg. 6+

A tiny Pascal compiler. Part 1. The P-code interpreter.
BYTE Sep 1978 (v.3#9) pg. 58

A tiny Pascal compiler. Part 2. The P-compiler.
BYTE Oct 1978 (v.3#10) pg. 34

A tiny Pascal compiler. Part 3. P-code to 8080 conversion.
BYTE Nov 1978 (v.3#11) pg. 182
Added Info BYTE Jul 1979 (v.4#7) pg. 231

Adapting the "GOTOXY" procedure used in PASCAL to do cursor addressing on a COPS-10 terminal or a SOROC 120 terminal.
BYTE Apr 1980 (v.5#4) pg. 110

PILOT/P. Implementing a high-level language in a hurry. Write a preprocessor in PASCAL that translates the target language's source code into PASCAL source code.
BYTE Jul 1980 (v.5#7) pg. 154

Routine for determining the actual precision of PASCAL floating-point routines.
BYTE Sep 1980 (v.5#9) pg. 20

Notes on absolute location interfaces to Apple PASCAL. Two programs to access memory locations directly when using Apple PASCAL.
BYTE Sep 1980 (v.5#9) pg. 324

A Pascal library unit for the Micromodem II. Pascal routines allow the Apple computer to perform mass-transfer and processing of files via the Micromodem II.
BYTE Feb 1981 (v.6#2) pg. 106

Recursion and side effects in Pascal. How the use of global and local variables can change the way a program works.
BYTE May 1981 (v.6#5) pg. 316

A file catalog system for UCSD Pascal. Keep track of up to 600 files on different disks.
BYTE May 1981 (v.6#5) pg. 408

BASIC, Pascal, or Tiny-C. A simple benchmarking comparison.
BYTE Oct 1981 (v.6#10) pg. 372

Apple Pascal cross-reference program.
BYTE Oct 1981 (v.6#10) pg. 419

Bits and bytes in Pascal. Some programming tricks that can be performed with UCSD Pascal.
BYTE Oct 1981 (v.6#10) pg. 448

WRITELONG. A Pascal simulation of long-integer output.
BYTE Nov 1981 (v.6#11) pg. 414

Information hiding in Pascal. Packages and pointers. How high-level programs are insulated from messy low-level details thus making them cleaner and easier to maintain.
BYTE Nov 1981 (v.6#11) pg. 493

A guided tour of Apple Pascal units and libraries. Creating new Pascal Units lets you add powerful features to the Apple II.
BYTE Feb 1982 (v.7#2) pg. 225

Four implementations of Pascal. (1) Pascal/M. (2) Pascal/Z. (3) Pascal/MT+. (4) UCSD Pascal. Includes four programs to check primes, precision, blowup, and benchmark.
BYTE Mar 1982 (v.7#3) pg. 316

Converting Apple DOS and Pascal text files. Exchange information between DOS 3.3 and Pascal operating systems.
BYTE Apr 1982 (v.7#4) pg. 447

CHEDIT. A graphics-character editor lets you define your own character set for Apple Pascal.
BYTE May 1982 (v.7#5) pg. 426

Listing the disk directory in CP/M-based Pascal.
BYTE Jun 1982 (v.7#6) pg. 497

Idiot-proof input routine for Pascal.
BYTE Jul 1982 (v.7#7) pg. 452

A Sophisticated Operating System (SOS) for your Apple III computer is designed to operate with Pascal. This article presents a set of routines to allow direct access to SOS file calls from a Pascal program.
BYTE Dec 1982 (v.7#12) pg. 448

High-speed Pascal text file I/O procedures written in Apple Pascal.
BYTE Jan 1983 (v.8#1) pg. 454
Correction BYTE Mar 1983 (v.8#3) pg. 82

Passing untyped parameters in UCSD Pascal. An assembler-language function and a "trick" are combined in a parameter-passing method.
BYTE Feb 1983 (v.8#2) pg. 452

Strongly typed languages. Ada, Pascal and other new languages let you define your own data types. This programming technique and it's advantages are explained.
BYTE May 1983 (v.8#5) pg. 418

Squeezing memory from the Apple with Pascal. Using Pascal's segmentation facilities and other techniques to write bigger programs than you might have thought possible.
BYTE Jul 1983 (v.8#7) pg. 417

Help in Apple II Pascal. This easy-to-implement "HELP" system offers online instructions and explanations anywhere in a program.
BYTE Aug 1983 (v.8#8) pg. 477

The IBM PC and the Intel 8087 coprocessor. Part 2. Interfacing to IBM Pascal to speed up most Pascal programs by a factor of three.
BYTE Sep 1983 (v.8#9) pg. 331

Bullet-proof Pascal input. This valid-number program screens out invalid data when numberical data is required.
BYTE Feb 1984 (v.9#2) pg. 428

An introduction to PASCAL.
KILOBAUD MICROCOMPUTING #42 Jun 1980 pg. 68

Pascal means business. Arguments for using Pascal over BASIC when writing business programs.
KILOBAUD MICROCOMPUTING #52 Apr 1981 (v.5#4) pg. 46

Timing comparisons (benchmark tests) to compare BASIC with Pascal.
MICROCOMPUTING Apr 1982 (v.6#4) pg. 140

Pascal I/O interfacing made easy. Includes instructions for writing PEEK and POKE statements in Pascal.
MICROCOMPUTING May 1982 (v.6#5) pg. 94

Assembler language subroutines for use with the AM9511A arithmetic processor (in slot 5) with Apple Pascal.
MICROCOMPUTING Aug 1982 (v.6#8) pg. 34

How to control the Epson MX-80 printer with Pascal commands.
MICROCOMPUTING #87 Mar 1984 (v.8#3) pg. 42