1555 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			49 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			1555 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			49 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
.\" $Header$
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.ds OF \\fBtest~off:~\\fR
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.ds ON \\fBtest~on:~~\\fR
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.ds AL \\fBtest~all:~\\fR
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.ll 72
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.wh 0 hd
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.wh 60 fo
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.de hd
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'sp 5
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..
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.de fo
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'bp
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..
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.tr ~
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.               TITLE
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.de TL
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.sp 15
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.ce
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\\fB\\$1\\fR
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..
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.               AUTHOR
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.de AU
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.sp 15
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.ce
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by
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.sp 2
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.ce
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\\$1
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..
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.               DATE
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.de DA
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.sp 3
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.ce
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						||
( Dated \\$1 )
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..
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.               INSTITUTE
 | 
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.de VU
 | 
						||
.sp 3
 | 
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.ce 4
 | 
						||
Wiskundig Seminarium
 | 
						||
Vrije Universiteit
 | 
						||
De Boelelaan 1081
 | 
						||
Amsterdam
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               PARAGRAPH
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						||
.de PP
 | 
						||
.sp
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.ti +5
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.nr CH 0 1
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						||
.               CHAPTER
 | 
						||
.de CH
 | 
						||
.nr SH 0 1
 | 
						||
.bp
 | 
						||
.in 0
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						||
\\fB\\n+(CH.~\\$1\\fR
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						||
.PP
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						||
..
 | 
						||
.               SUBCHAPTER
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						||
.de SH
 | 
						||
.sp 3
 | 
						||
.in 0
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						||
\\fB\\n(CH.\\n+(SH.~\\$1\\fR
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						||
.PP
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               INDENT START
 | 
						||
.de IS
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.in +5
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               INDENT END
 | 
						||
.de IE
 | 
						||
.in -5
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               DOUBLE INDENT START
 | 
						||
.de DS
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.in +5
 | 
						||
.ll -5
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               DOUBLE INDENT END
 | 
						||
.de DE
 | 
						||
.ll +5
 | 
						||
.in -5
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               EQUATION START
 | 
						||
.de EQ
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.nf
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               EQUATION END
 | 
						||
.de EN
 | 
						||
.fi
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               ITEM
 | 
						||
.de IT
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.in 0
 | 
						||
\\fBISO~\\$1:\\fR~\\
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               IMPLEMENTATION 1
 | 
						||
.de I1
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
1.~\\
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.               IMPLEMENTATION 2
 | 
						||
.de I2
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
2.~\\
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.de CS
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
~-~\\
 | 
						||
..
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
.fi
 | 
						||
.TL "Amsterdam Compiler Kit-Pascal reference manual"
 | 
						||
.AU "Johan W. Stevenson"
 | 
						||
.DA "January 4, 1983"
 | 
						||
.VU
 | 
						||
.CH "Introduction"
 | 
						||
This document refers to the (March 1980) ISO standard proposal for Pascal [1].
 | 
						||
Ack-Pascal complies with the requirements of this proposal almost completely.
 | 
						||
The standard requires an accompanying document describing the
 | 
						||
implementation-defined and implementation-dependent features,
 | 
						||
the reaction on errors and the extensions to standard Pascal.
 | 
						||
These four items will be treated in the rest of this document,
 | 
						||
each in a separate chapter.
 | 
						||
The other chapters describe the deviations from the standard and
 | 
						||
the list of options recognized by the compiler.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The Ack-Pascal compiler produces code for an EM machine as defined in [2].
 | 
						||
It is up to the implementor of the EM machine to decide whether errors like
 | 
						||
integer overflow, undefined operand and range bound error are recognized or not.
 | 
						||
For these errors the reaction of some known implementations is given.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
There does not (yet) exist a hardware EM machine.
 | 
						||
Therefore, EM programs must be interpreted, or translated into
 | 
						||
instructions for a target machine.
 | 
						||
For the following implementations the behavior is documented:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
an interpreter running on a PDP-11.
 | 
						||
Normally the interpreter performs some tests to detect undefined
 | 
						||
integers, integer overflow, range errors, etc.
 | 
						||
However, an option of the interpreter is to skip these tests.
 | 
						||
Another option is to perform some extra tests
 | 
						||
to check for instance the number of actual parameter
 | 
						||
words against the number expected by
 | 
						||
the called procedure.
 | 
						||
We will refer to these modes of operation as 'test all', 'test on' and 'test off'.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
a translator into PDP-11 instructions.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.CH "Implementation-defined features"
 | 
						||
For each implementation-defined feature mentioned in the ISO standard
 | 
						||
we give the section number, the quotation from that section and the definition.
 | 
						||
First we quote the definition of implementation-defined:
 | 
						||
.DS
 | 
						||
Those parts of the language which may differ between processors, but which
 | 
						||
will be defined for any particular processor.
 | 
						||
.DE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.1.7
 | 
						||
Each string-character shall denote an implementation-defined value of char-type.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
All 7-bits ASCII characters except linefeed LF (10) are allowed.
 | 
						||
Note that an apostrophe ' must be doubled within a string.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.2.2
 | 
						||
The values of type real shall be an implementation-defined subset
 | 
						||
of the real numbers denoted as specified by 6.1.5.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The format of reals is not defined in EM.
 | 
						||
Even the size of reals depends on the implementation.
 | 
						||
The compiler can be instructed, by the f-option, to use a different
 | 
						||
size for real values.
 | 
						||
The size of reals is preset by the calling program \fIack\fP
 | 
						||
[4] to
 | 
						||
the proper size.
 | 
						||
For each implementation of EM the following constants must be defined:
 | 
						||
     epbase: the base for the exponent part
 | 
						||
     epprec: the precision of the fraction
 | 
						||
     epemin: the minimum exponent
 | 
						||
     epemax: the maximum exponent
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
These constants must be chosen so that zero and all numbers with
 | 
						||
exponent e in the range
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     epemin <= e <= epemax
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
and fraction-parts of the form
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     f = +_ f\d1\u.b\u-1\d + ... + f\depprec\u.b\u-epprec\d
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
where
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     f\di\u = 0,...,epbase-1 and f\d1\u <> 0
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
are possible values for reals.
 | 
						||
All other values of type real are considered illegal.
 | 
						||
(See [3] for more information about these constants).
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
For the known EM implementations these constants are:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
epbase = 2
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
epprec = 24
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
epemin = -127
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
epemax = +127
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
ditto
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.2.2
 | 
						||
The type char shall be the enumeration of a set of implementation-defined
 | 
						||
characters, some possibly without graphic representations.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The 7-bits ASCII character set is used, where LF (10) denotes the
 | 
						||
end-of-line marker on text-files.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.2.2
 | 
						||
The ordinal numbers of the character values shall be values of integer-type,
 | 
						||
that are implementation-defined, and that are determined by mapping
 | 
						||
the character values on to consecutive non-negative integer values
 | 
						||
starting at zero.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The normal ASCII ordering is used: ord('0')=48, ord('A')=65, ord('a')=97, etc.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.3.4
 | 
						||
The largest and smallest values of integer-type
 | 
						||
permitted as numbers of a value
 | 
						||
of a set-type shall be implementation-defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The smallest value is 0. The largest value is default 15, but can be
 | 
						||
changed by using the i-option of the compiler up to a maximum
 | 
						||
of 32767.
 | 
						||
The compiler allocates as many bits for set-type variables as are necessary
 | 
						||
to store all possible values of the host-type of the base-type of the set,
 | 
						||
rounded up to the nearest multiple of 16.
 | 
						||
If 8 bits are sufficient then only
 | 
						||
8 bits are used if part of a packed structure.
 | 
						||
Thus, the variable s, declared by
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     var s: set of '0'..'9';
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
will contain 128 bits, not 10 or 16.
 | 
						||
These 128 bits are stored in 16 bytes, both for packed and unpacked sets.
 | 
						||
If the host-type of the base-type is integer, then the
 | 
						||
number of bits depends on the i-option.
 | 
						||
The programmer may specify how many bits to allocate for these sets.
 | 
						||
The default is 16, the maximum is 32767.
 | 
						||
The effective number of bits is rounded up to the next multiple of 16, or up
 | 
						||
to 8 if the number of bits is less than or equal to 8.
 | 
						||
Note that the use of set-constructors for sets with more than 256 elements
 | 
						||
is far less efficient than for smaller sets.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.2.2
 | 
						||
The predefined constant maxint shall be of integer-type and shall denote
 | 
						||
an implementation-defined value, that satisfies the following conditions:
 | 
						||
.sp 1
 | 
						||
.in +5
 | 
						||
.ti -4
 | 
						||
(a)~All integral values in the closed interval from -maxint to +maxint
 | 
						||
shall be values in the integer-type.
 | 
						||
.ti -4
 | 
						||
(b)~Any monadic operation performed on an integer value in this interval
 | 
						||
shall be correctly performed according to the mathematical rules for
 | 
						||
integer arithmetic.
 | 
						||
.ti -4
 | 
						||
(c)~Any dyadic integer operation on two integer values in this same interval
 | 
						||
shall be correctly performed according to the mathematical rules for
 | 
						||
integer arithmetic, provided that the result is also in this interval.
 | 
						||
.ti -4
 | 
						||
(d)~Any relational operation on two integer values in this same interval
 | 
						||
shall be correctly performed according to the mathematical rules for
 | 
						||
integer arithmetic.
 | 
						||
.in -5
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The representation of integers in EM is a \fIn\fP*8-bit word using
 | 
						||
two's complement arithmetic.
 | 
						||
Where \fIn\fP is called wordsize.
 | 
						||
The compiler can only generate code for EM with wordsize 2.
 | 
						||
Thus always:
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     maxint = 32767
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
Because the number -32768 may be used to indicate 'undefined', the
 | 
						||
range of available integers depends on the EM implementation:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ON-32767..+32767.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(OF-32768..+32767.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
-32768..+32767.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.4.2
 | 
						||
The default TotalWidth values for integer, Boolean and real types
 | 
						||
shall be implementation-defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The defaults are:
 | 
						||
     integer    6
 | 
						||
     Boolean    5
 | 
						||
     real      13
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.4.5.1
 | 
						||
ExpDigits, the number of digits written in an exponent part of a real,
 | 
						||
shall be implementation-defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
ExpDigits is defined as
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     ceil(log10(log10(2 ** epemax)))
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
For the current implementations this evaluates to 2.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.4.5.1
 | 
						||
The character written as part of the representation of
 | 
						||
a real to indicate the beginning of the exponent part shall be
 | 
						||
implementation-defined, either 'E' or 'e'.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The exponent part starts with 'e'.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.4.6
 | 
						||
The case of the characters written as representation of the
 | 
						||
Boolean values shall be implementation-defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The representations of true and false are 'true' and 'false'.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.6
 | 
						||
The effect caused by the standard procedure page
 | 
						||
on a text file shall be implementation-defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The ASCII character form feed FF (12) is written.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.10
 | 
						||
The binding of the variables denoted by the program-parameters
 | 
						||
to entities external to the program shall be implementation-defined if
 | 
						||
the variable is of a file-type.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The program parameters must be files and all, except input and output,
 | 
						||
must be declared as such in the program block.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The program parameters input and output, if specified, will correspond
 | 
						||
with the UNIX streams 'standard input' and 'standard output'.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The other program parameters will be mapped to the argument strings
 | 
						||
provided by the caller of this program.
 | 
						||
The argument strings are supposed to be path names of the files to be
 | 
						||
opened or created.
 | 
						||
The order of the program parameters determines the mapping:
 | 
						||
the first parameter is mapped onto the first argument string etc.
 | 
						||
Note that input and output are ignored in this mapping.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The mapping is recalculated each time a program parameter
 | 
						||
is opened for reading or writing by a call to the standard procedures
 | 
						||
reset or rewrite.
 | 
						||
This gives the programmer the opportunity to manipulate the list
 | 
						||
of string arguments using the external procedures argc, argv and argshift
 | 
						||
available in libpc [7].
 | 
						||
.IT 6.10
 | 
						||
The effect of an explicit use of reset or rewrite
 | 
						||
on the standard textfiles input or output shall be implementation-defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The procedures reset and rewrite are no-ops
 | 
						||
if applied to input or output.
 | 
						||
.CH "Implementation-dependent features"
 | 
						||
For each implementation-dependent feature mentioned in the ISO standard draft,
 | 
						||
we give the section number, the quotation from that section and the way
 | 
						||
this feature is treated by the Ack-Pascal system.
 | 
						||
First we quote the definition of 'implementation-dependent':
 | 
						||
.DS
 | 
						||
Those parts of the language which may differ between processors,
 | 
						||
and for which there need not be a definition for a particular processor.
 | 
						||
.DE
 | 
						||
.IT 5.1.1
 | 
						||
The method for reporting errors or warnings shall be implementation-dependent.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The error handling is treated in a following chapter.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.1.4
 | 
						||
Other implementation-dependent directives may be defined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Except for the required directive 'forward' the Ack-Pascal compiler recognizes
 | 
						||
only one directive: 'extern'.
 | 
						||
This directive tells the compiler that the procedure block of this
 | 
						||
procedure will not be present in the current program.
 | 
						||
The code for the body of this procedure must be included at a later
 | 
						||
stage of the compilation process.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
This feature allows one to build libraries containing often used routines.
 | 
						||
These routines do not have to be included in all the programs using them.
 | 
						||
Maintenance is much simpler if there is only one library module to be
 | 
						||
changed instead of many Pascal programs.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
Another advantage is that these library modules may be written in a different
 | 
						||
language, for instance C or the EM assembly language.
 | 
						||
This is useful if you want to use some specific EM instructions not generated
 | 
						||
by the Pascal compiler. Examples are the system call routines and some
 | 
						||
floating point conversion routines.
 | 
						||
Another motive could be the optimization of some time-critical program parts.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The use of external routines, however, is dangerous.
 | 
						||
The compiler normally checks for the correct number and type of parameters
 | 
						||
when a procedure is called and for the result type of functions.
 | 
						||
If an external routine is called these checks are not sufficient,
 | 
						||
because the compiler can not check whether the procedure heading of the
 | 
						||
external routine as given in the Pascal program matches the actual routine
 | 
						||
implementation.
 | 
						||
It should be the loader's task to check this.
 | 
						||
However, the current loaders are not that smart.
 | 
						||
Another solution is to check at run time, at least the number of words
 | 
						||
for parameters. Some EM implementations check this:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ALthe number of words passed as parameters is checked, but this will not catch all faulty cases.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(ONnot checked.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
not checked.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
For those who wish the use the interface between C and Pascal we
 | 
						||
give an incomplete list of corresponding formal parameters in C and Pascal.
 | 
						||
.sp 1
 | 
						||
.ta 8 37
 | 
						||
.nf
 | 
						||
	Pascal	C
 | 
						||
	a:integer	int a
 | 
						||
	a:char	int a
 | 
						||
	a:boolean	int a
 | 
						||
	a:real	double a
 | 
						||
	a:^type	type *a
 | 
						||
	var a:type	type *a
 | 
						||
	procedure a(pars)	struct {
 | 
						||
		     void (*a)() ;
 | 
						||
		     char *static_link ;
 | 
						||
		}
 | 
						||
	function a(pars):type	struct {
 | 
						||
		     type (*a)() ;
 | 
						||
		     char *static_link ;
 | 
						||
		}
 | 
						||
.fi
 | 
						||
The Pascal runtime system uses the following algorithm when calling
 | 
						||
function/procedures passed as parameters.
 | 
						||
.nf
 | 
						||
.ta 8 16
 | 
						||
	if ( static_link ) (*a)(static_link,pars) ;
 | 
						||
	else               (*a)(pars) ;
 | 
						||
.fi
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.2.1
 | 
						||
The order of evaluation of the operands of a dyadic operator
 | 
						||
shall be implementation-dependent.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Operands are always evaluated, so the program part
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     if (p<>nil) and (p^.value<>0) then
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
is probably incorrect.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The left-hand operand of a dyadic operator is almost always evaluated
 | 
						||
before the right-hand side.
 | 
						||
Some peculiar evaluations exist for the following cases:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
1.~\
 | 
						||
the modulo operation is performed by a library routine to
 | 
						||
check for negative values of the right operand.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
2.~\
 | 
						||
the expression
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     set1 <= set2
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
where set1 and set2 are compatible set types is evaluated in the
 | 
						||
following steps:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
evaluate set2
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
evaluate set1
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
compute set2+set1
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
test set2 and set2+set1 for equality
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
This is the only case where the right-hand side is computed first.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
3.~\
 | 
						||
the expression
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     set1 >= set2
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
where set1 and set2 are compatible set types is evaluated in the following steps:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
evaluate set1
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
evaluate set2
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
compute set1+set2
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
test set1 and set1+set2 for equality
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.3
 | 
						||
The order of evaluation, accessing and binding
 | 
						||
of the actual-parameters for functions
 | 
						||
shall be implementation-dependent.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The order of evaluation is from right to left.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.8.2.2
 | 
						||
If access to the variable in an assignment-statement involves the indexing of an array
 | 
						||
and/or a reference to a field within a variant of a record
 | 
						||
and/or the de-referencing of a pointer-variable
 | 
						||
and/or a reference to a buffer-variable,
 | 
						||
the decision whether these actions precede or follow the evaluation
 | 
						||
of the expression shall be implementation-dependent.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The expression is evaluated first.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.8.2.3
 | 
						||
The order of evaluation and binding of the actual-parameters for procedures
 | 
						||
shall be implementation-dependent.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The same as for functions.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.6
 | 
						||
The effect of inspecting a text file to which the page
 | 
						||
procedure was applied during generation is
 | 
						||
implementation-dependent.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The formfeed character written by page is
 | 
						||
treated like a normal character, with ordinal value 12.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.10
 | 
						||
The binding of the variables denoted by the program-parameters
 | 
						||
to entities external to the program shall be implementation-dependent unless
 | 
						||
the variable is of a file-type.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Only variables of a file-type are allowed as program parameters.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.CH "Error handling"
 | 
						||
There are three classes of errors to be distinguished.
 | 
						||
In the first class are the error messages generated by the compiler.
 | 
						||
The second class consists of the occasional errors generated by the other
 | 
						||
programs involved in the compilation process.
 | 
						||
Errors of the third class are the errors as defined in the standard by:
 | 
						||
.DS
 | 
						||
An error is a violation by a program of the requirements of this standard
 | 
						||
such that detection normally requires execution of the program.
 | 
						||
.DE
 | 
						||
.SH "Compiler errors"
 | 
						||
The error messages (and the listing) are not generated by the compiler itself.
 | 
						||
The compiler only detects errors and writes the errors in condensed form on
 | 
						||
an intermediate file.
 | 
						||
Each error in condensed form contains:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
an optional error message parameter (identifier or number).
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
an error number
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
a line number
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
a column number.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
Every time the compiler detects an error that does not have influence
 | 
						||
on the code produced by the compiler or on the syntax decisions, a warning
 | 
						||
messages is given.
 | 
						||
If only warnings are generated, compilation proceeds and probably results
 | 
						||
in a correctly compiled program.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The intermediate error file is read by the interface program
 | 
						||
\fIack\fP [4],
 | 
						||
that produces the error messages.
 | 
						||
It uses an other file, the error message file,
 | 
						||
to find an error script line.
 | 
						||
Whenever this error script line contains the character '%', the error messages
 | 
						||
parameter is substituted.
 | 
						||
For negative error numbers the message constructed is prepended with 'Warning: '.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
Sometimes the compiler produces several errors for the same file position
 | 
						||
(line number, column number).
 | 
						||
Only the first of these messages is given, because the others are probably
 | 
						||
directly caused by the first one.
 | 
						||
If the first one is a warning while one of its successors for that position
 | 
						||
is a fatal message, then the warning is promoted to a fatal one.
 | 
						||
However, parameterized messages are always given.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The error messages and listing come in three flavors, selected by flags
 | 
						||
given to \fIack\fP [4]:
 | 
						||
.in +10
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
default:no listing, one line per error giving the file name
 | 
						||
of the Pascal source file, the line number and the error messages.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
-e:~~~~~for each erroneous line a listing of the line and its predecessor.
 | 
						||
The next line contains one or more characters '^' pointing to the
 | 
						||
places where an error is detected.
 | 
						||
For each error on that line a message follows.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
-E:~~~~~same as for '-e', except that all source lines are listed,
 | 
						||
even if the program is perfect.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.SH "Other errors detected at compilation time"
 | 
						||
Two main categories: file system problems and table overflow.
 | 
						||
Problems with the file system may be caused by protection (you may not read
 | 
						||
or create files) or by space problems (no space left on device; out of inodes;
 | 
						||
too many processes).
 | 
						||
Table overflow problems are often caused by peculiar source programs:
 | 
						||
very long procedures or functions, a lot of strings.
 | 
						||
Table overflow problems can sometimes be cured
 | 
						||
by giving a flag (-sl when producing e.out files) to \fIack\fP [4].
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
Extensive treatment of these errors is outside the scope of this manual.
 | 
						||
.SH "Runtime errors"
 | 
						||
Errors detected at run time cause an error message to be generated on the
 | 
						||
diagnostic output stream (UNIX file descriptor 2).
 | 
						||
The message consists of the name of the program followed by a message
 | 
						||
describing the error, possibly followed by the source line number.
 | 
						||
Unless the l-option is turned off, the compiler generates code to keep track
 | 
						||
of which source line causes which EM instructions to be generated.
 | 
						||
It depends on the EM implementation whether these LIN instructions
 | 
						||
are skipped or executed:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
LIN instructions are always executed. The old line number is saved and
 | 
						||
restored whenever a procedure or function is called.
 | 
						||
All error messages contain this line number, except when the l-option
 | 
						||
was turned off.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
same as above, but line numbers are not saved when procedures and functions
 | 
						||
are called.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
For each error mentioned in the standard we give the section number,
 | 
						||
the quotation from that section and the way it is processed by the
 | 
						||
Pascal-compiler or runtime system.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
For detected errors the corresponding message
 | 
						||
and trap number are given.
 | 
						||
Trap numbers are useful for exception-handling routines.
 | 
						||
Normally, each error causes the program to terminate.
 | 
						||
By using exception-handling routines one can
 | 
						||
ignore errors or perform alternate actions.
 | 
						||
Only some of the errors can be ignored
 | 
						||
by restarting the failing instruction.
 | 
						||
These errors are marked as non-fatal,
 | 
						||
all others as fatal.
 | 
						||
A list of errors with trap number between 0 and 63
 | 
						||
(EM errors) can be found in [2].
 | 
						||
Errors with trap number between 64 and 127 (Pascal errors) are listed in [8].
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.3.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if any field-identifier defined within a variant
 | 
						||
is used in a field-designator unless the value of the tag-field
 | 
						||
is associated with that variant.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
Sometimes this feature is used to achieve easy type conversion.
 | 
						||
However, using record variants this way is dangerous, error prone and not portable.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.6
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if a value of type T2 must be
 | 
						||
assignment-compatible with type T1, while
 | 
						||
T1 and T2 are compatible ordinal-types and the value of
 | 
						||
type T2 is not in the closed interval specified by T1.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The compiler distinguishes between array-index expressions and the other
 | 
						||
places where assignment-compatibility is required.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
Array subscripting is done using the EM array instructions.
 | 
						||
These instructions have three arguments: the array base address,
 | 
						||
the index and the address of the array descriptor.
 | 
						||
An array descriptor describes one dimension by three values:
 | 
						||
the element size, the lower bound on the index and the number of elements
 | 
						||
minus one.
 | 
						||
It depends on the EM implementation whether these bounds are checked:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ONchecked (array bound error, trap 0, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(OFnot checked
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
not checked.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
The other places where assignment-compatibility is required are:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
assignment
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
value parameters
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
procedures read and readln
 | 
						||
.CS
 | 
						||
the final value of the for-statement
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
For these places the compiler generates an EM range check instruction, except
 | 
						||
when the r-option is turned off, or when the range of values of T2
 | 
						||
is enclosed in the range of T1.
 | 
						||
If the expression consists of a single variable and if that variable
 | 
						||
is of a subrange type,
 | 
						||
then the subrange type itself is taken as T2, not its host-type.
 | 
						||
Therefore, a range instruction is only generated if T1 is a subrange type
 | 
						||
and if the expression is a constant, an expression with two or more
 | 
						||
operands, or a single variable with a type not enclosed in T1.
 | 
						||
If a constant is assigned, then the EM optimizer removes the range check
 | 
						||
instruction, except when the value is out of bounds.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
It depends on the EM implementation whether the range check instruction
 | 
						||
is executed or skipped:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ONchecked (range bound error, trap 1, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(OFskipped
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
skipped
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.4.6
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if a value of type T2 must be
 | 
						||
assignment-compatible with type T1, while T1 and T2 are compatible
 | 
						||
set-types and any member of the value of type T2
 | 
						||
is not in the closed interval specified by the base-type
 | 
						||
of the type T1.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.5.4
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the pointer-variable has a nil-value or is undefined at the time
 | 
						||
it is de-referenced.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The EM definition does not specify the binary representation of pointer
 | 
						||
values, so that it is not possible to choose an otherwise illegal
 | 
						||
binary representation for the pointer value NIL.
 | 
						||
Rather arbitrary the compiler uses the integer value zero to represent NIL.
 | 
						||
For all current implementations this does not cause problems.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The size of pointers depends on the implementation and is
 | 
						||
preset in the compiler by \fIack\fP [4].
 | 
						||
The compiler can be instructed, by the p-option, to use
 | 
						||
any size for pointer objects.
 | 
						||
NIL is represented here by the appropriate number of zero words.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
It depends on the EM implementation whether de-referencing of a pointer
 | 
						||
with value NIL causes an error:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ONfor every de-reference the pointer value is checked to be legal.
 | 
						||
The value NIL is always illegal.
 | 
						||
Objects addressed by a NIL pointer always cause an error, except
 | 
						||
when they are part of some extraordinary sized structure
 | 
						||
(bad pointer, trap 22, fatal).
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(OFde-referencing for fetching will not cause
 | 
						||
an error to occur.
 | 
						||
However, if the pointer value is used for a store operation,
 | 
						||
a segmentation violation probably results (memory fault, trap 21, fatal).
 | 
						||
(Note: this is only true if the interpreter is executed with coinciding
 | 
						||
address spaces and protected text part. The interpreter must therefore
 | 
						||
be loaded with the '-n' option of the UNIX loader [5]).
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
de-referencing for a fetch operation will not cause an error.
 | 
						||
A store operation probably causes an error if the '-n' flag is
 | 
						||
specified to \fIack\fP [4] or ld [5] while loading your program.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
Some implementations of EM initialize all memory cells for newly
 | 
						||
created variables with a constant that probably causes an error if that variable
 | 
						||
is not initialized with a value of its own type before use.
 | 
						||
For each implementation we give whether memory cells are initialized,
 | 
						||
with what value, and whether this value causes an error if de-referenced.
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
each memory word is initialized with the bit representation 1000000000000000,
 | 
						||
representing -32768 in 2's complement notation.
 | 
						||
For most small and medium sized programs this value will cause a segmentation
 | 
						||
violation (memory fault, trap 21, fatal).
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
no initialization.
 | 
						||
Whenever a pointer is de-referenced, without being properly initialized,
 | 
						||
a segmentation violation (memory fault, trap 21, fatal)
 | 
						||
or 'bus error' are possible.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.5.5
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the value of a file-variable f is altered
 | 
						||
while the buffer-variable is an actual variable parameter, or
 | 
						||
an element of the record-variable-list of a with-statement, or both.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected
 | 
						||
.IT 6.5.5
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the value of a file-variable f is altered
 | 
						||
by an assignment-statement which contains the buffer-variable f^ in
 | 
						||
its left-hand side.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the stated pre-assertion does not hold immediately
 | 
						||
prior to any use of the file handling procedures
 | 
						||
rewrite, put, reset and get.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
For each of these four operations the pre-assertions
 | 
						||
can be reformulated as:
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
rewrite(f):~no pre-assertion.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
put(f):~~~~~f is opened for writing and f^ is not undefined.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
reset(f):~~~f exists.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
get(f):~~~~~f is opened for reading and eof(f) is false.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
The following errors are detected for these operations:
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
rewrite(f):
 | 
						||
.in +10
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
more args expected, trap 64, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
f is a program-parameter and the corresponding
 | 
						||
file name is not supplied by the caller of the program.
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
rewrite error, trap 101, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
the caller of the program lacks the necessary
 | 
						||
access rights to create the file in the file system
 | 
						||
or operating system problems like table overflow
 | 
						||
prevent creation of the file.
 | 
						||
.in -10
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
put(f):
 | 
						||
.in +10
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
file not yet open, trap 72, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
reset or rewrite are never applied to the file.
 | 
						||
The checks performed by the run time system are not foolproof.
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
not writable, trap 96, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
f is opened for reading.
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
write error, trap 104, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
probably caused by file system problems.
 | 
						||
For instance, the file storage is exhausted.
 | 
						||
Because IO is buffered to improve performance,
 | 
						||
it might happen that this error occurs if the
 | 
						||
file is closed.
 | 
						||
Files are closed whenever they are rewritten or reset, or on
 | 
						||
program termination.
 | 
						||
.in -10
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
reset(f):
 | 
						||
.in +10
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
more args expected, trap 64, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
same as for rewrite(f).
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
reset error, trap 100, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
f does not exist, or the caller has insufficient access rights, or
 | 
						||
operating system tables are exhausted.
 | 
						||
.in -10
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
get(f):
 | 
						||
.in +10
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
file not yet open, trap 72, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
as for put(f).
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
not readable, trap 97, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
f is opened for writing.
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
end of file, trap 98, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
eof(f) is true just before the call to get(f).
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
read error, trap 103, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
unlikely to happen. Probably caused by hardware problems
 | 
						||
or by errors elsewhere in your program that destroyed
 | 
						||
the file information maintained by  the run time system.
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
truncated, trap 99, fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
the file is not properly formed by an integer
 | 
						||
number of file elements.
 | 
						||
For instance, the size of a file of integer is odd.
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
non-ASCII char read, trap 106, non-fatal:
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
the character value of the next character-type
 | 
						||
file element is out of range (0..127).
 | 
						||
Only for text files.
 | 
						||
.in -10
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error to change any variant-part of a variable
 | 
						||
allocated by the form new(p,c1,...,cn) from the variant specified.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if a variable to be disposed had been allocated
 | 
						||
using the form new(p,c1,...,cn) with more variants specified than
 | 
						||
specified to dispose.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error can cause more memory to be freed then was allocated.
 | 
						||
Dispose causes a fatal trap 73 when memory already on the free
 | 
						||
list is freed again.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the variants of a variable to be disposed
 | 
						||
are different from those specified by the case-constants to dispose.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the value of the pointer parameter of dispose has
 | 
						||
nil-value or is undefined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The same comments apply as for de-referencing NIL or undefined pointers.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if a variable that is identified by the pointer parameter
 | 
						||
of dispose (or a component thereof) is currently either an actual
 | 
						||
variable parameter, or an element of the record-variable-list of a
 | 
						||
with-statement, or both.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.5.3
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if a referenced-variable created using the second form
 | 
						||
of new is used in its entirety
 | 
						||
as an operand in an expression, or as the variable in an assignment-statement
 | 
						||
or as an actual-parameter.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the mathematical defined result of an
 | 
						||
arithmetic function would fall outside the set of values
 | 
						||
of the indicated result.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Except for the errors for undefined arguments,
 | 
						||
the following errors may occur for the arithmetic functions:
 | 
						||
.in +16
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
abs(x):~~~~none.
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
sqr(x):~~~~real underflow, trap 5, non-fatal;
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
real overflow, trap 4, non-fatal
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
sin(x):~~~~real underflow, trap 5, non-fatal
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
cos(x):~~~~real underflow, trap 5, non-fatal
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
exp(x):~~~~error in exp, trap 65, non-fatal (if x>10000);
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
real underflow, trap 5, non-fatal;
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
real overflow, trap 4, non-fatal
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
ln(x):~~~~~error in ln, trap 66, non-fatal ( if x<=0)
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
sqrt(x):~~~error in sqrt, trap 67, non-fatal (if x<0)
 | 
						||
.ti -11
 | 
						||
arctan(x):~real underflow, trap 5, non-fatal;
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
real overflow, trap 4, non-fatal
 | 
						||
.in -16
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if x in ln(x) is not greater than zero.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
See above.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if x in sqrt(x) is negative.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
See above.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the integer value of trunc(x) does not exist.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (conversion error, trap 10, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the integer value of round(x) does not exist.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (conversion error, trap 10, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the integer value of ord(x) does not exist.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error can not occur, because the compiler will not allow
 | 
						||
such ordinal types.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the character value of chr(x) does not exist.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Except when the r-option is turned off, the compiler generates an EM
 | 
						||
range check instruction. The effect of this instruction depends on the
 | 
						||
EM implementation as described before.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the value of succ(x) does not exist.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Same comments as for chr(x).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the value of pred(x) does not exist.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Same comments as for chr(x).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.5
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
f in eof(f) is undefined.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (file not yet open, trap 72, fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.6.6.5
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
f in eoln(f) is undefined, or if eof(f) is true at that time.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The following errors may occur:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
file not yet open, trap 72, fatal;
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
not readable, trap 97, fatal;
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
end of file, trap 98, fatal.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.1
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if any variable or function used as an operand in an expression is
 | 
						||
undefined at the time of its use.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
Detection of undefined operands is only possible if there is at least one bit
 | 
						||
representation that is not allowed as legal value.
 | 
						||
The set of legal values depends on the type of the operand.
 | 
						||
To detect undefined operands, all newly created variables must be assigned
 | 
						||
a value illegal for the type of the created variable.
 | 
						||
The compiler itself does not generate code to initialize newly created variables.
 | 
						||
Instead, the compiler generates code to allocate some new memory cells.
 | 
						||
It is up to the EM implementation to initialize these memory cells.
 | 
						||
However, the EM machine does not know the types of the variables for which
 | 
						||
memory cells are allocated.
 | 
						||
Therefore, the best an EM implementation can do is to initialize with a value
 | 
						||
that is illegal for the most common types of operands.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
For all current EM implementations we will describe whether memory cells
 | 
						||
are initialized, which value is used to initialize, for each operand type
 | 
						||
whether that value is illegal, and for all operations on all operand
 | 
						||
types whether that value is detected as undefined.
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ONnew memory words are initialized with -32768.
 | 
						||
Assignment of this value is always allowed. Errors may occur
 | 
						||
whenever undefined operands are used in operations.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
.ul
 | 
						||
integer:
 | 
						||
-32768 is illegal. All arithmetic operations (except unary +) cause
 | 
						||
an error (undefined integer, trap 8, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
Relational operations do not, except for IN when the left operand is undefined.
 | 
						||
Printing of -32768 using write is allowed.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
.ul
 | 
						||
real:
 | 
						||
the bit representation of a real, caused by initializing the constituent
 | 
						||
memory words with -32768, is illegal.
 | 
						||
All arithmetic and relational operations (except unary +) cause an error
 | 
						||
(real undefined, trap 9, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
Printing causes the same error.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
.ul
 | 
						||
char:
 | 
						||
the value -32768 is illegal. For objects of type 'packed array[] of char'
 | 
						||
half the characters will have the value chr(0), which is legal, and the
 | 
						||
others will have the value chr(128), outside the valid ASCII range.
 | 
						||
The relational operators, however, do not cause an error.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
.ul
 | 
						||
Boolean:
 | 
						||
the value -32768 is illegal. For objects of type 'packed array[] of boolean'
 | 
						||
half the booleans will have the value false, while the others have the value v,
 | 
						||
where ord(v) = 128, naturally illegal.
 | 
						||
However, the Boolean and relational operations do not cause an error.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
.ul
 | 
						||
set:
 | 
						||
undefined operands of type set can not be distinguished from
 | 
						||
properly initialized ones.
 | 
						||
The set and relational operations, therefore, can never cause an error.
 | 
						||
However, if one forgets to initialize a set of character, then spurious
 | 
						||
characters like '/', '?', 'O', '_' and 'o' appear.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
\*(OFnew memory cells are initialized with -32768.
 | 
						||
The only cases where this value causes an error are when
 | 
						||
an undefined operand of type real is used in an arithmetic or relational
 | 
						||
operation (except unary +) or when an undefined real is used as an
 | 
						||
argument to a standard function.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
Newly created memory cells are not initialized and therefore
 | 
						||
they have a random value.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.1
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the value of any member denoted by any member-designator of the
 | 
						||
set-constructor is outside the implementation-defined limits.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (set bound error, trap 2, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.1
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
the possible types of an set-constructor do not permit it
 | 
						||
to assume a suitable type.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The compiler allocates as many bits as are necessary to store all
 | 
						||
elements of the host-type of the base-type of the set, not the
 | 
						||
base-type itself.
 | 
						||
Therefore, all possible errors can be detected at compile time.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.2.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if j is zero in 'i div j'.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
It depends on the EM implementation whether this error is detected:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ONdetected (divide by 0, trap 6, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(OFnot detected.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
not detected.
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.2.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if
 | 
						||
j is zero or negative in i MOD j.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (only positive j in 'i mod j', trap 71, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.7.2.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the result of any operation on integer
 | 
						||
operands is not performed according to the mathematical
 | 
						||
rules for integer arithmetic.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
The reaction depends on the EM implementation:
 | 
						||
.I1
 | 
						||
\*(ONerror detected if
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     (result >= 32768) or (result < -32768).
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
(integer overflow, trap 3, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
Note that if the result is -32768 the use of this value in further operations
 | 
						||
may cause an error.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
\*(OFnot detected.
 | 
						||
.I2
 | 
						||
not detected.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.8.3.5
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if none of the case-constants is equal to the value of the
 | 
						||
case-index upon entry to the case-statement.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (case error, trap 20, fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.8.3.9
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the final-value of a for-statement is not
 | 
						||
assignment-compatible with the control-variable when the
 | 
						||
initial-value is assigned to the control-variable.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
It is detected if the control variable leaves
 | 
						||
its allowed range of values while stepping
 | 
						||
from initial to final value.
 | 
						||
This is equivalent with the requirements if the
 | 
						||
for-statement is not terminated before
 | 
						||
the final value is reached.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the sequence of characters read looking for an integer does not
 | 
						||
form a signed-integer as specified in 6.1.5.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (digit expected, trap 105, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if the sequence of characters read looking for a real does not
 | 
						||
form a signed-number as specified in 6.1.5.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (digit expected, trap 105, non-fatal).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.2
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if read is applied to f while f is undefined or
 | 
						||
not opened for reading.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (see get(f)).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.4
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if write is applied to f while f is undefined or
 | 
						||
not opened for writing.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (see put(f)).
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.4
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if TotalWidth or FracDigits as specified in
 | 
						||
write or writeln procedure calls are less than one.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is not detected. Moreover, it is considered an extension to
 | 
						||
allow zero or negative values.
 | 
						||
.IT 6.9.6
 | 
						||
It shall be an error if page is applied to f while f is undefined or
 | 
						||
not opened for writing.
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
This error is detected (see put(f)).
 | 
						||
.CH "Extensions to the standard"
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
1.~\
 | 
						||
Separate compilation.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
The compiler is able to (separately) compile a collection of declarations,
 | 
						||
procedures and functions to form a library.
 | 
						||
The library may be linked with the main program, compiled later.
 | 
						||
The syntax of these modules is
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     module = [constant-definition-part]
 | 
						||
              [type-definition-part]
 | 
						||
              [var-declaration-part]
 | 
						||
              [procedure-and-function-declaration-part]
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
The compiler accepts a program or a module:
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     unit = program | module
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
All variables declared outside a module must be imported
 | 
						||
by parameters, even the files input and output.
 | 
						||
Access to a variable declared in a module is only possible
 | 
						||
using the procedures and functions declared in that same module.
 | 
						||
By giving the correct procedure/function heading followed by the
 | 
						||
directive 'extern' you may use procedures and functions declared in
 | 
						||
other units.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
2.~\
 | 
						||
Assertions.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
The Ack-Pascal compiler recognizes an additional statement, the assertion.
 | 
						||
Assertions can be used as an aid in debugging and documentation.
 | 
						||
The syntax is:
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     assertion = 'assert' Boolean-expression
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
An assertion is a simple-statement, so
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     simple-statement = [assignment-statement |
 | 
						||
                         procedure-statement |
 | 
						||
                         goto-statement |
 | 
						||
                         assertion
 | 
						||
                        ]
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
An assertion causes an error if the Boolean-expression is false.
 | 
						||
That is its only purpose.
 | 
						||
It does not change any of the variables, at least it should not.
 | 
						||
Therefore, do not use functions with side-effects in the Boolean-expression.
 | 
						||
If the a-option is turned off, then assertions are skipped by the
 | 
						||
compiler. 'assert' is not a word-symbol (keyword) and may be used as identifier.
 | 
						||
However, assignment to a variable and calling of a procedure with that name will be impossible.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
3.~\
 | 
						||
Additional procedures.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
Three additional standard procedures are available:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
halt:~~~a call of this procedure is equivalent to jumping to the
 | 
						||
end of your program. It is always the last statement executed.
 | 
						||
The exit status of the program may be supplied
 | 
						||
as optional argument.
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
release:
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
mark:~~~for most applications it is sufficient to use the heap as second stack.
 | 
						||
Mark and release are suited for this type of use, more suited than dispose.
 | 
						||
mark(p), with p of type pointer, stores the current value of the
 | 
						||
heap pointer in p. release(p), with p initialized by a call
 | 
						||
of mark(p), restores the heap pointer to its old value.
 | 
						||
All the heap objects, created by calls of new between the call of
 | 
						||
mark and the call of release, are removed and the space they used
 | 
						||
can be reallocated.
 | 
						||
Never use mark and release together with dispose!
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.in -10
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
4.~\
 | 
						||
UNIX interfacing.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
If the c-option is turned on, then some special features are available
 | 
						||
to simplify an interface with the UNIX environment.
 | 
						||
First of all, the compiler allows you to use a different type
 | 
						||
of string constants.
 | 
						||
These string constants are delimited by double quotes ('"').
 | 
						||
To put a double quote into these strings, you must repeat the double quote,
 | 
						||
like the single quote in normal string constants.
 | 
						||
These special string constants are terminated by a zero byte (chr(0)).
 | 
						||
The type of these constants is a pointer to a packed array of characters,
 | 
						||
with lower bound 1 and unknown upper bound.
 | 
						||
.br
 | 
						||
Secondly, the compiler predefines a new type identifier 'string' denoting
 | 
						||
this just described string type.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The only thing you can do with these features is declaration of
 | 
						||
constants and variables of type 'string'.
 | 
						||
String objects may not be allocated on the heap and string pointers
 | 
						||
may not be de-referenced.
 | 
						||
Still these strings are very useful in combination with external routines.
 | 
						||
The procedure write is extended to print these zero-terminated strings correctly.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
5.~\
 | 
						||
Double length (32 bit) integers.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
If the d-option is turned on, then the additional type 'long' is known to the compiler.
 | 
						||
Long variables have integer values in the range -2147483647..+2147483647.
 | 
						||
Long constants may be declared.
 | 
						||
It is not allowed to form subranges of type long.
 | 
						||
All operations allowed on integers are also
 | 
						||
allowed on longs and are indicated by the same
 | 
						||
operators: '+', '-', '*', '/', 'div', 'mod'.
 | 
						||
The procedures read and write have been extended to handle long arguments correctly.
 | 
						||
The default width for longs is 11.
 | 
						||
The standard procedures 'abs' and 'sqr' have been extended to work on long arguments.
 | 
						||
Conversion from integer to long, long to real,
 | 
						||
real to long and long to integer are automatic, like the conversion from integer to real.
 | 
						||
These conversions may cause a
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
conversion error, trap 10, non-fatal
 | 
						||
.IE
 | 
						||
This last error is only detected in implementation 1, with 'test on'.
 | 
						||
Note that all current implementations use target
 | 
						||
machine floating point instructions
 | 
						||
to perform some of the long operations.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
6.~\
 | 
						||
Underscore as letter.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
The character '_' may be used in forming identifiers, if the u-option is turned on.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
7.~\
 | 
						||
Zero field width in write.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
Zero or negative TotalWidth arguments to write
 | 
						||
are allowed.
 | 
						||
No characters are written for character, string or Boolean type arguments then.
 | 
						||
A zero or negative FracDigits argument for fixed-point representation of reals causes the
 | 
						||
fraction and the character '.' to be suppressed.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
8.~\
 | 
						||
Alternate symbol representation.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
The comment delimiters '(*' and '*)' are recognized and treated like '{' and '}'.
 | 
						||
The other alternate representations of symbols are not recognized.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
9.~\
 | 
						||
Pre-processing.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
If the very first character of a file containing a Pascal
 | 
						||
program is the sharp ('#', ASCII 23(hex)) the file is preprocessed
 | 
						||
in the same way as C programs.
 | 
						||
Lines beginning with a '#' are taken as preprocessor command lines
 | 
						||
and not fed to the Pascal compiler proper.
 | 
						||
C style comments, /*......*/, are removed by the C preprocessor,
 | 
						||
thus C comments inside Pascal programs are also removed when they
 | 
						||
are fed through the preprocessor.
 | 
						||
.CH "Deviations from the standard"
 | 
						||
Ack-Pascal deviates from the (March 1980) standard proposal in the following ways:
 | 
						||
.IS
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
1.~\
 | 
						||
Only the first 8 characters of identifiers are significant,
 | 
						||
as requested by all standard proposals prior to March 1980.
 | 
						||
In that proposal, however, the sentence
 | 
						||
.DS
 | 
						||
"A conforming program should not have its meaning altered
 | 
						||
by the truncation of its identifiers to eight characters
 | 
						||
or the truncation of its labels to four digits."
 | 
						||
.DE
 | 
						||
is missing.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
2.~\
 | 
						||
The character sequences 'procedur', 'procedur8', 'functionXyZ' etc. are
 | 
						||
all erroneously classified as the word-symbols 'procedure' and 'function'.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
3.~\
 | 
						||
Standard procedures and functions are not allowed as parameters in Ack-Pascal,
 | 
						||
conforming to all previous standard proposals.
 | 
						||
You can obtain the same result with negligible loss of performance
 | 
						||
by declaring some user routines like:
 | 
						||
.EQ
 | 
						||
     function sine(x:real):real;
 | 
						||
     begin
 | 
						||
         sine:=sin(x)
 | 
						||
     end;
 | 
						||
.EN
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -3
 | 
						||
4.~\
 | 
						||
The scope of identifiers and labels should start at the beginning of the block
 | 
						||
in which these identifiers or labels are declared.
 | 
						||
The Ack-Pascal compiler, as most other one pass compilers, deviates in this respect,
 | 
						||
because the scope of variables and labels start
 | 
						||
at their defining-point.
 | 
						||
.CH "Compiler options"
 | 
						||
Some options of the compiler may be controlled by using "{$....}".
 | 
						||
Each option consists of a lower case letter followed by +, - or an unsigned
 | 
						||
number.
 | 
						||
Options are separated by commas.
 | 
						||
The following options exist:
 | 
						||
.in 8
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
a~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
this option switches assertions on and off.
 | 
						||
If this option is on, then code is included to test these assertions
 | 
						||
at run time. Default +.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
c~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
this option, if on, allows you to use C-type string constants
 | 
						||
surrounded by double quotes.
 | 
						||
Moreover, a new type identifier 'string' is predefined.
 | 
						||
Default -.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
d~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
this option, if on, allows you to use variables of type 'long'.
 | 
						||
Default -.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
f~<num>~\
 | 
						||
the size of reals can be changed by this option. <num> should be specified in 8-bit bytes.
 | 
						||
The default in most implementations is 8, but other values can
 | 
						||
occur.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
i~<num>~\
 | 
						||
with this flag the setsize for a set of integers can be
 | 
						||
manipulated.
 | 
						||
The number must be the number of bits per set.
 | 
						||
The default value is 16, just fitting in one word on the PDP and many other minis.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
l~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
if + then code is inserted to keep track of the source line number.
 | 
						||
When this flag is switched on and off, an incorrect line number may appear
 | 
						||
if the error occurs in a part of your program for which this flag is off.
 | 
						||
These same line numbers are used for the profile, flow and count options
 | 
						||
of the EM interpreter em [6].
 | 
						||
Default +.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
p~<num>~the size of pointers can be changed by this option. <num> should be specified in bytes.
 | 
						||
Default 2 in most implementations.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
r~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
if + then code is inserted to check subrange variables against
 | 
						||
lower and upper subrange limits.
 | 
						||
Default +.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
s~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
if + then the compiler will hunt for places in your program
 | 
						||
where non-standard features are used, and for each place found
 | 
						||
it will generate a warning. Default -.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
t~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
if + then each time a procedure is entered, the routine 'procentry'
 | 
						||
is called.
 | 
						||
The compiler checks this flag just before the first symbol that follows the
 | 
						||
first 'begin' of the body of the procedure.
 | 
						||
Also, when the procedure exits, then the procedure 'procexit' is called
 | 
						||
if the t flag is on just before the last 'end' of the procedure body.
 | 
						||
Both 'procentry' and 'procexit' have a packed array of 8 characters as a parameter.
 | 
						||
Default procedures are present in the run time library.
 | 
						||
Default -.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -8
 | 
						||
u~+/-~~~\
 | 
						||
if + then the character '_' is treated like a lower case letter,
 | 
						||
so that it may be used in identifiers.
 | 
						||
Procedure and function identifiers starting with an underscore may cause problems,
 | 
						||
because they may collide with library routine names.
 | 
						||
Default -.
 | 
						||
.in 0
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
Seven of these flags (c, d, f, i, p, s and u) are only effective when they appear
 | 
						||
before the 'program' symbol. The others may be switched on and off.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
A second method of passing options to the compiler ia available.
 | 
						||
This method uses the file on which the compact EM code will be written.
 | 
						||
The compiler starts reading from this file scanning for options
 | 
						||
in the same format as used normally, except for the comment delimiters and
 | 
						||
the dollar sign.
 | 
						||
All options found on the file override the options set in your program.
 | 
						||
Note that the compact code file must always exist before the compiler is called.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
The user interface program \fIack\fP[4]
 | 
						||
takes care of creating this file normally
 | 
						||
and also writes one of its options onto this file.
 | 
						||
The user can specify, for instance, without changing any character in its
 | 
						||
Pascal program, that the compiler must include code for
 | 
						||
procedure/function tracing.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
Another very powerful debugging tool is the knowledge that inaccessible
 | 
						||
statements and useless tests are removed by the EM optimizer.
 | 
						||
For instance, a statement like:
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.nf
 | 
						||
        if debug then
 | 
						||
          writeln('initialization done');
 | 
						||
.fi
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
is completely removed by the optimizer if debug is a constant with
 | 
						||
value false.
 | 
						||
The first line is removed if debug is a constant with value true.
 | 
						||
Of course, if debug is a variable nothing can be removed.
 | 
						||
.PP
 | 
						||
A disadvantage of Pascal, the lack of preinitialized data, can be
 | 
						||
diminished by making use of the possibilities of the EM optimizer.
 | 
						||
For instance, initializing an array of reserved words is sometimes
 | 
						||
optimized into 3 EM instructions. To maximize this effect you must initialize
 | 
						||
variables as much as possible in order of declaration and array entries
 | 
						||
in order of decreasing index.
 | 
						||
.CH "References"
 | 
						||
.in +5
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[1]~~\
 | 
						||
ISO standard proposal ISO/TC97/SC5-N462, dated February 1979.
 | 
						||
The same proposal, in slightly modified form, can be found in:
 | 
						||
A.M.Addyman e.a., "A draft description of Pascal",
 | 
						||
Software, practice and experience, May 1979.
 | 
						||
An improved version, received March 1980,
 | 
						||
is followed as much as possible for the
 | 
						||
current Ack-Pascal.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[2]~~\
 | 
						||
A.S.Tanenbaum, J.W.Stevenson, Hans van Staveren, E.G.Keizer,
 | 
						||
"Description of a machine architecture for use with block structured languages",
 | 
						||
Informatica rapport IR-81.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[3]~~\
 | 
						||
W.S.Brown, S.I.Feldman, "Environment parameters and basic functions
 | 
						||
for floating-point computation",
 | 
						||
Bell Laboratories CSTR #72.
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[4]~~\
 | 
						||
UNIX manual ack(I).
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[5]~~\
 | 
						||
UNIX manual ld(I).
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[6]~~\
 | 
						||
UNIX manual em(I).
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[7]~~\
 | 
						||
UNIX manual libpc(VII)
 | 
						||
.sp
 | 
						||
.ti -5
 | 
						||
[8]~~\
 | 
						||
UNIX manual pc_prlib(VII)
 |