I'm curious about the history of the base language reportedly designed at Evans & Sutherland 1971ish. I couldn't turn up much in the few minutes of searching I did. If anyone can provide links to papers or anything on this subject I would appreciate it.
The DoD DTIC service has a couple of reports that cover the Harbor Pilot Simulation, but I haven't found any reports written by E&S. The Computer History Museum has some records from Evans and Sutherland, but I don't think any of them cover the language.
Thanks, but I saw that much, I should have been clearer. I'm hoping for something on the scale of a survey if not a paper.
Honestly, my first curiosity regards whether Chuck Moore and Forth get any mention or whether this is a true parallel development, possibly necessitated by the hardware at hand. My perception, based on zero evidence, was that Forth had some influence on the design of Postscript.
Slightly tangential, but here's my own Sierpinski triangle program from a couple of decades ago, which IMO is considerably simpler than what they show:
I've been writing a PostScript interpreter as a retirement project. I deliberately avoided looking at the Adobe source although I have been running the LaserWriter firmware[1] in MAME[2].
At the moment I'm just implementing the language. The core interpreter is done apart from error handling and a ton of operators. After that I'll decide whether to go on to the imaging.
I'm curious about the history of the base language reportedly designed at Evans & Sutherland 1971ish. I couldn't turn up much in the few minutes of searching I did. If anyone can provide links to papers or anything on this subject I would appreciate it.
As a a starting point, "The Origins of PostScript" (https://gwern.net/doc/design/typography/2018-warnock.pdf) provides a few details on the language and Gaffney's involvement. Warnock's oral history for the Computer History Museum (https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/10273875...) also includes the story. Gaffney's patent provides the most detail but, unfortunately, it is written as a patent rather than a language description.
The DoD DTIC service has a couple of reports that cover the Harbor Pilot Simulation, but I haven't found any reports written by E&S. The Computer History Museum has some records from Evans and Sutherland, but I don't think any of them cover the language.
Thanks, but I saw that much, I should have been clearer. I'm hoping for something on the scale of a survey if not a paper.
Honestly, my first curiosity regards whether Chuck Moore and Forth get any mention or whether this is a true parallel development, possibly necessitated by the hardware at hand. My perception, based on zero evidence, was that Forth had some influence on the design of Postscript.
Slightly tangential, but here's my own Sierpinski triangle program from a couple of decades ago, which IMO is considerably simpler than what they show:
It actually can be simplified a bit more, and the explicit recursion can be removed entirely, since there's already a free operand stack.I've been writing a PostScript interpreter as a retirement project. I deliberately avoided looking at the Adobe source although I have been running the LaserWriter firmware[1] in MAME[2].
At the moment I'm just implementing the language. The core interpreter is done apart from error handling and a ton of operators. After that I'll decide whether to go on to the imaging.
[1] http://beefchicken.com/retro/laserwriter [2] https://github.com/mamedev/mame/blob/master/src/mame/apple/l...