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<int-e> learn The password of the month is release incident pilot.
author | HackEso <hackeso@esolangs.org> |
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date | Sun, 03 Nov 2024 00:31:02 +0000 |
parents | 859f9b4339e6 |
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.\" Note: This is both a current manual and an archeological exhibit. .\" All revisions must be properly conditioned on the c string so that .\" it's still possible to format the INTERCAL-72 manual. Only outright .\" errors should be corrected -- each of these is marked with CORRECTION .\" and an explanatory comment. .\" .\" This document is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify .\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by .\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or .\" (at your option) any later version. .\" .\" This document is distributed in the hope that it will be amusing, .\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of .\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the .\" GNU General Public License for more details. .\" .\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License .\" along with this document; if not, write to the Free Software .\" Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. .ND .ds vb V\v'-0.2'\h'-0.6'\-\v'0.2' .if n .ds es \o"O|" .if t .ds es \(es .if n .ds ct \o"c/" .if t .ds ct \(ct .if n .ds no \o"-'" .if t .ds no \(no .if n .ds ov - .if t .ds ov \(rn .INITR intercal.refs .TL THE INTERCAL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE .br .if '\*c'y' REVISED REFERENCE MANUAL .if '!\*c'n' REFERENCE MANUAL .AU "Donald R. Woods" .AF "" .AU "and" .AF "" .AU "James M. Lyon" .AF "" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .AU "" .AU "C-INTERCAL revisions:" .AU "Louis Howell" .AF "" .AU "and" .AF "" .AU "Eric S. Raymond" \} .AF "" .AST "" .AS 2 .ce 2 \fICopyright (C) 1973 by Donald R. Woods and James M. Lyon\fR .if '\*c'y' \{\ .ce 2 \fICopyright (C) 1996, 1997 by Eric S. Raymond Redistribution encouraged under GPL\} .sp .ce 1 (This version distributed with C-INTERCAL 0.18) .AE .MT 4 .nr % 0 .nr Hs 5 .nr Ej 1 .bp .H 1 "INTRODUCTION" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "But I don't want to go among mad people," Alice remarked. .P "Oh, you ca'n't help that," said the Cat: "We're all mad here. I'm mad. You're mad." .P "How do you know I'm mad?" said Alice. .P "You must be," said the Cat, "or you wouldn't have come here." .DE \} .P The names you are about to ignore are true. However, the story has been changed significantly. Any resemblance of the programming language portrayed here to other programming languages, living or dead, is purely coincidental. .H 2 "Origin and Purpose" .P The INTERCAL programming language was designed the morning of May 26, 1972 by Donald R. Woods and James M. Lyon, at Princeton University. Exactly when in the morning will become apparent in the course of this manual. .ie '\*c'y' \{\ .P Eighteen years later (give or take a few months) Eric S. Raymond perpetrated a UNIX-hosted INTERCAL compiler as a weekend hack. The C-INTERCAL implementation has since been maintained and extended by an international community of technomasochists, including Louis Howell, Steve Swales, Michael Ernst, and Brian Raiter. .P (There was evidently an Atari implementation sometime between these two; notes on it got appended to the INTERCAL-72 manual. The culprits have sensibly declined to identify themselves.) .P INTERCAL \} .el It was inspired by one ambition: to have a compiler language which has nothing at all in common with any other major language. By 'major' was meant anything with which the authors were at all familiar, e.g., FORTRAN, BASIC, COBOL, ALGOL, SNOBOL, SPITBOL, FOCAL, SOLVE, TEACH, APL, LISP, and PL/I. For the most part, INTERCAL has remained true to this goal, sharing only the basic elements such as variables, arrays, and the ability to do I/O, and eschewing all conventional operations other than the assignment statement (FORTRAN "="). .H 2 "Acronym" .P The full name of the compiler is "Compiler Language With No Pronounceable Acronym", which is, for obvious reasons, abbreviated "INTERCAL". .H 2 "Acknowledgments" .P The authors are deeply indebted to Eric M. Van and Daniel J. Warmenhoven, without whose unwitting assistance this manual would still have been possible. .H 1 "FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "There's nothing like eating hay when you're faint," the White King remarked to Alice, as he munched away. .P "I should think throwing cold water over you would be better," Alice suggested: "-- or some sal-volatile." .P "I didn't say there was nothing \fIbetter\fR," the King replied. "I said there was nothing \fIlike\fR it." Which Alice did not venture to deny. .DE \} .P In this section an attempt is made to describe how and why INTERCAL may be used; i.e., what it is like and what it is good for. .H 2 "Sample Program" .SETR example1 .P Shown below is a relatively simple INTERCAL program which will read in 32-bit unsigned integers, treat them as signed, 2's-complement numbers, and print out their absolute values. The program exits if the absolute value is zero. Note in particular the inversion routine (statements 6 through 14), which could be greatly simplified if the subroutine library (see section .GETHN sublib ) were used. .P A more detailed analysis of a program is made in section .GETHN proghints of this manual. .\" Note: there was an error in line 15 in the original manual; .\" the operands of the third \(ct were swapped. .DS L .cs R 24 DO (5) NEXT (5) DO FORGET #1 PLEASE WRITE IN :1 DO .1 <- '\*(vb":1~'#32768\*(ct#0'"\*(ct#1'~#3 DO (1) NEXT DO :1 <- "'\*(vb":1~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct#65535' ~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'\*(vb":1~'#0\*(ct#65535'" \*(ct#65535'~'#0\*(ct#65535'" DO :2 <- #1 PLEASE DO (4) NEXT (4) DO FORGET #1 DO .1 <- "\*(vb':1~:2'\*(ct#1"~#3 DO :1 <- "'\*(vb":1~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct":2~'#65535 \*(ct#0'"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'\*(vb":1~'#0 \*(ct#65535'"\*(ct":2~'#0\*(ct#65535'"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'" DO (1) NEXT DO :2 <- ":2~'#0\*(ct#65535'" \*(ct"'":2~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1'" DO (4) NEXT (2) DO RESUME .1 (1) PLEASE DO (2) NEXT PLEASE FORGET #1 DO READ OUT :1 PLEASE DO .1 <- '\*(vb"':1~:1'~#1"\*(ct#1'~#3 DO (3) NEXT PLEASE DO (5) NEXT (3) DO (2) NEXT PLEASE GIVE UP .cs R .DE .H 2 "Uses for INTERCAL" .P INTERCAL's main advantage over other programming languages is its strict simplicity. It has few capabilities, and thus there are few restrictions to be kept in mind. Since it is an exceedingly easy language to learn, one might expect it would be a good language for initiating novice programmers. Perhaps surprising, then, is the fact that it would be more likely to initiate a novice into a search for another line of work. As it turns out, INTERCAL is more useful (which isn't saying much) as a challenge to professional programmers. Those who doubt this need only refer back to the sample program in section .GETHN example1 .\" CORRECTION: .\" The original manual counted 22 statements, incorrectly. \&. This 23-statement program took somewhere from 15 to 30 minutes to write, whereas the same objectives can be achieved by single-statement programs in either SNOBOL; .DS L PLEASE INPUT POS(0) ('-' ! '') + (SPAN('0123456789') $ OUTPUT) + *NE(OUTPUT) :S(PLEASE)F(END) .DE or APL; .DS L [1] \(->0\(!=\(sq\(<-\(or\(sq .DE Admittedly, neither of these is likely to appear more intelligible to anyone unfamiliar with the languages involved, but they took roughly 60 seconds and 15 seconds, respectively, to write. Such is the overwhelming power of INTERCAL! .P The other major importance of INTERCAL lies in its seemingly inexhaustible capacity for amazing one's fellow programmers, confounding programming shop managers, winning friends, and influencing people. It is a well-known and oft-demonstrated fact that a person whose work is incomprehensible is held in high esteem. For example, if one were to state that the simplest way to store a value of 65536 in a 32-bit INTERCAL variable is: .DS L DO :1 <- #0\*(ct#256 .DE any sensible programmer would say that that was absurd. Since this is indeed the simplest method, the programmer would be made to look foolish in front of his boss, who would of course happened to turn up, as bosses are wont to do. The effect would be no less devastating for the programmer having been correct. .H 1 "DESCRIPTION" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "I quite agree with you," said the Duchess; "and the moral of that is -- 'Be what you would seem to be' -- or, if you'd like it put more simply -- 'Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise." .P "I think I should understand that better," Alice said very politely, "if I had it written down: but I ca'n't quite follow it as you say it." .P "That's nothing to what I could say if I chose," the Duchess replied, in a pleased tone. .DE \} .P The examples of INTERCAL programming which have appeared in the preceding sections of this manual have probably seemed highly esoteric to the reader unfamiliar with the language. With the aim of making them more so, we present here a description of INTERCAL. .H 2 "Variables" .P INTERCAL allows only 2 different types of variables, the .B "16-bit integer" and the .B "32-bit integer." These are represented by a spot (.) or two-spot (:), respectively, followed by any number between 1 and 65535, inclusive. These variables may contain only non-negative numbers; thus they have the respective ranges of values: 0 to 65535 and 0 to 4294967295. Note: .123 and :123 are two distinct variables. On the other hand, .1 and .0001 are identical. Furthermore, the latter may \fInot\fR be written as 1E-3. .H 2 "Constants" .P .B Constants are 16-bit values only and may range from 0 to 65535. They are prefixed by a mesh (#). Caution! Under no circumstances confuse the mesh with the interleave operator, except under confusing circumstances! .H 2 "Arrays" .P .B Arrays are represented by a tail (,) for 16-bit values, or a hybrid (;) for 32-bit values, followed by a number between 1 and 65535, inclusive. The number is suffixed by the word SUB, followed by the subscripts, separated optionally by spaces. Subscripts may be any expressions, including those involving subscripted variables. This occasionally leads to ambiguous constructions, which are resolved as discussed in section .GETHN precedence \&. Definition of array dimensions will be discussed later in greater detail, since discussing it in less detail would be difficult. As before, ,123 and ;123 are distinct. In summary, .123, :123, #123, ,123, and ;123 are all distinct. .H 2 "Operators" .P INTERCAL recognizes 5 operators -- 2 binary and 3 unary \*F. Please be kind to our operators: they may not be very intelligent, but they're all we've got. In a sense, all 5 operators are binary, as they are all bit-oriented, but it is not our purpose here to quibble about bits of trivia. .if '\*c'y' \{\ .FS Other operators are also available with C-INTERCAL's non-standard dialects; see section .GETHN tri_intercal \&. .FE \} .H 3 "Binary Operators" .P The binary operators are \fBinterleave\fR (also called \fBmingle\fR) and \fBselect\fR, which are represented by a change (\*(ct) and a sqiggle [sic] (~), respectively. .if '\*c'y' \{\ (In C-INTERCAL's ASCII environment, EBCDIC \*(ct is replaced by a big money ($), but \*(ct can be used if encoded in Latin-1 as \e0xA2 or UTF-8 as 0xC2A2.) \} .P The interleave operator takes two 16-bit values and produces a 32-bit result by alternating the bits of the operands. Thus, #65535\*(ct#0 has the 32-bit binary form 101010....10 or 2863311530 decimal, while #0\*(ct#65535 = 0101....01 binary = 1431655765 decimal, and #255\*(ct#255 is equivalent to #65535. .P The select operator takes from the first operand whichever bits correspond to 1's in the second operand, and packs these bits to the right in the result. Both operands are automatically padded on the left with zeros to 32 bits before the selection takes place, so the variable types are unrestricted. If more than 16 bits are selected, the result is a 32-bit value, otherwise it is a 16-bit value. For example, #179~#201 (binary value 10110011~11001001) selects from the first argument the 8th, 7th, 4th, and 1st from last bits, namely, 1001, which = 9. But #201~#179 selects from binary 11001001 the 8th, 6th, 5th, 2nd, and 1st from last bits, giving 10001 = 17. #179~#179 has the value 31, while #201~#201 has the value 15. .P Perhaps a simpler way of understanding the operation of the select operator .\" CORRECTION: .\" "in Figure 1" was originally "on the following page (Figure 1)" .\" We can't rely on the page boundaries any more. would be to examine the logic diagram in Figure 1, which performs the select operation upon two 8-bit values, A and B. The gates used are Warmenhovian logic gates, which means the outputs have four possible values: low, high, undefined (value of an uninitialized flip-flop), and oscillating (output of a NOR gate with one input low and the other input connected to the output). These values are represented symbolically by '0', '1', '?', and '\*(es'. Note in particular that, while NOT-0 is 1 and NOT-1 is 0 as in two-valued logic, NOT-? is ? and NOT-\*(es is \*(es. The functions of the various gates are listed in Table 1. .if n \{\ .P [Warning: The following picture will be garbled or missing. Get a better output device.] .sp 1 \} .PS # The CIRCUITOUS DIAGRAM, Figure 1 of the INTERCAL manual. # # Transcribed to PIC by Eric S. Raymond from the paper original. # The transcription is topologically correct but not geometrically perfect. # # I discovered late in the process that the gate spacing to gate width # ratio should be 6/5, not 5/5. The only place the difference shows is # in the zigzag part of the adventitious lead below gate 37, which is # a bit narrower in this version than in the paper original. # # Minor liberties have been taken with the sizes of some features at the # left and right sides to fit the diagram on a letter-sized page. The # A/B input leads should really be a whole boxwidth wide, and the bus line # rectangle was slightly wider and further right in the paper original. # Also, there are only 15 "New York" terminals rather than 16, and in the # original the bus terminal label texts were rotated 90 degrees clockwise. # # The whole diagram can be scaled horizontally or vertically by changing # the boxwid and boxht variables. At default scale the values boxwid = # 0.60 boxht = 0.525 reproduce the paper version most exactly; they get # the gate grid and leads nearly perfect. # scale=6/5 # This is how we scale the whole thing to fit on 8.5x11 boxwid = 0.60 boxht = 0.525 linewid = boxwid lineht = boxht movewid = boxwid moveht = boxht # Offset of top and bottom pins from gate midline define pinoffset {(2/3)} define warmengate { # Draw a Warmenhovian gate box [ box invis; line from last box .sw \ to last box .nw \ to 1/2 <last box .ne, last box .n> \ to 1/2 <last box .e, last box .ne> \ to 1/2 <last box .e, last box .se> \ to 1/2 <last box .se, last box .s> \ to last box .sw; IN: last box .w; UP: pinoffset <last box .w, last box .nw> DN: pinoffset <last box .w, last box .sw> OUT: last box .e; "$1" at last box .center; ] } [ # Beginning of diagram object # Draw the gate array copy thru % move to (($1-1) * movewid * 2, ($2-1) * moveht * 2); warmengate($3) % until "END" 0 1 6 0 2 6 0 3 1 0 4 1 0 5 1 0 6 1 0 7 1 0 8 1 0 9 1 0 10 1 END copy thru % move to ((boxwid + movewid * 7 / 5) + ($1-2) * movewid * 2, ($2-1) * moveht * 2); warmengate($3) % until "END" 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 3 2 1 4 2 1 5 2 1 6 2 1 7 2 1 8 2 1 9 2 1 10 2 2 1 1 2 2 7 2 3 4 2 4 3 2 5 3 2 6 3 2 7 7 2 8 3 2 9 7 2 10 3 3 1 1 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 3 5 4 3 6 3 3 7 3 3 8 3 3 9 3 3 10 3 4 1 1 4 2 4 4 3 5 4 4 5 4 5 4 4 6 5 4 7 4 4 8 3 4 9 2 4 10 1 END # Draw bus line: BUSLINE: box with .sw at 41st [].se + (boxwid/2, 0) \ wid (boxwid / 2) \ ht (50th [].n.y - 41st [] .s.y) copy thru % move to $1 / 40 <last box .n, last box .s>; "$2" % until "END" 9 B 11 U 13 S 17 L 19 I 21 N 23 E 30 8 END define newyork { line right boxwid/3 box invis "" "TO" "NEW" "YORK" "" } define philly { line right boxwid/3 box invis "" "TO" "PHILA-" "DELPHIA" "" } for i = 0 to 14 do { move to (i+1)/18 <BUSLINE.ne,BUSLINE.se> newyork } move to (i+1)/18 <BUSLINE.ne,BUSLINE.se> philly define dot {circle rad 0.03 filled 1} # Place a junction dot wherever we are define junction % {dot at Here}; % # Draw inputs define inwidth {boxwid*3/4} define drawinputs { line left inwidth from $1.UP; "A" at last line .end - (0.1, 0) rjust; "$2" at last line .end - (0.05, 0.1) rjust; move to last line .center; A$2: junction line left inwidth from $1.DN; "B" at last line .end - (0.1, 0) rjust; "$2" at last line .end - (0.05, 0.1) rjust; move to last line .center; B$2: junction } drawinputs(3rd [],8) drawinputs(4th [],7) drawinputs(5th [],6) drawinputs(6th [],5) drawinputs(7th [],4) drawinputs(8th [],3) drawinputs(9rd [],2) # Gate 10 inputs have to be done by hand define go {move to $1;} # Define `gate' to *refer* to nth gate define gate {`$1'th []} # Go to specified pin of given gate define pin {gate($1).$2} # We exploit the quantization of lead placements here # Draw from left edge of box $1 quanta of inter-box horizontal distance define left_mv {line left boxwid * $1 / 5;} # Draw from right edge of box $1 quanta of inter-box horizontal distance define right_mv {line right boxwid * $1 / 5;} # Draw from top pin of box $1 quanta of inter-box vertical distance up define up_mv {line up (boxht * (2 - pinoffset)) * $1 / 4;} # Draw from bottom pin of box $1 quanta of inter-box vertical distance down define dn_mv {line down (boxht * (2 - pinoffset)) * $1 / 4;} # Draw from here to given object, with directional constraint define vert {line up ($1.y - Here.y);} define horz {line right ($1.x - Here.x);} define zig {vert($1) horz($1)} define to_bus {line to (BUSLINE.w, Here)} define ground { dn_mv(1) [ boxwid = boxwid * (3/4) boxht = boxht / 3 box invis line from last box .ne to last box .nw line from 1/3 <last box.e,last box.c> to 1/3 <last box.w,last box.c> line from 2/3 <last box.se,last box.s> to 2/3 <last box.sw,last box.s> ] } # Now all those connections # Gate 1: go(pin(1,OUT)) right_mv(3) CORNER:Here; zig(pin(12,DN)) go(CORNER) vert(pin(1,UP)) \ {junction horz(pin(11,UP))} \ up_mv(2) junction horz(gate(32).e) right_mv(3) junction {zig(pin(43,IN))} horz(gate(42).e) right_mv(1) junction {to_bus} vert(pin(43,UP)) up_mv(2) to_bus # Gate 2 go(pin(2,OUT)) right_mv(2) zig(pin(12,UP)) # Gate 3 go(A8) up_mv(1) horz(gate(13).e) right_mv(3) zig(pin(23,IN)) go(B8) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(13)) right_mv(1) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(23).e) right_mv(2) dn_mv(2) horz(pin(32,UP)) go(pin(3,OUT)) right_mv(2) vert(gate(3).UP) up_mv(3) horz(gate(13).e) right_mv(2) vert(gate(15,UP)) up_mv(4) #??? don't know why 4 is necessary horz(gate(16).w) left_mv(1) vert(gate(6).w) up_mv(4) left_mv(2) zig(pin(7,OUT)) # Gate 4 go(A7) up_mv(1) horz(gate(14).e) right_mv(1) zig(pin(24,UP)) go(B7) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(4)) right_mv(1) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(14).e) right_mv(3) vert(pin(26,UP)) up_mv(1) horz(gate(25)) up_mv(2) horz(gate(25).e) right_mv(4) vert(pin(38,UP)) up_mv(1) horz(gate(48).e) right_mv(1) vert(pin(47,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(47).w) left_mv(3) vert(gate(46).DN) dn_mv(2) right_mv(2) vert(gate(45).DN) dn_mv(2) left_mv(3) vert(gate(44).DN) right_mv(3) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(33).w) left_mv(1) vert(gate(33).DN) dn_mv(3) horz(gate(32).e) up_mv(2) horz(gate(42).e) dn_mv(2) line down boxwid/5 to_bus go(pin(4,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {zig(pin(13,UP))} vert(pin(4,UP)) up_mv(3) junction {right_mv(3) zig(pin(15,IN))} left_mv(2) vert(pin(7,UP)) up_mv(3) right_mv(3) zig(pin(19,DN)) # Gate 5 go(A6) up_mv(1) horz(gate(15).e) right_mv(1) vert(pin(15,UP)) junction {horz(pin(25,UP))} vert(pin(15,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(25).e) right_mv(1) zig(pin(34,UP)) go(B6) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(25).e) dn_mv(1) right_mv(4) vert(pin(24,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(34).e) right_mv(1) vert(pin(32,DN)) dn_mv(1) right_mv(3) zig(pin(42,IN)) go(pin(5,OUT)) right_mv(5) junction {vert(pin(14,IN)) junction {horz(pin(14,IN))} zig(pin(13,IN)) } vert(pin(17,DN)) junction {horz(pin(17,DN))} zig(pin(18,DN)) # Gate 6 go(A5) up_mv(1) horz(gate(16).e) right_mv(1) zig(pin(26,UP)) go(B5) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(26).e) right_mv(3) zig(pin(34,IN)) go(pin(6,OUT)) right_mv(4) junction {horz(pin(16,IN))} vert(pin(15,DN)) junction {horz(pin(15,DN))} vert(pin(14,DN)) junction {horz(pin(14,DN))} zig(pin(13,DN)) # Gate 7 go(A4) up_mv(1) horz(gate(27).e) right_mv(3) vert(pin(37,IN)) junction {horz(pin(37,IN))} vert(pin(37,DN)) dn_mv(2) right_mv(1) junction {zig(pin(36,IN))} horz(gate(37).e) right_mv(3) zig(pin(45,IN)) go(B4) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(17).e) right_mv(4) vert(pin(26,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(26).e) dn_mv(2) right_mv(4) vert(pin(35,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(35).e) right_mv(2) junction {zig(pin(45,UP))} {zig(pin(44,UP))} # Gate 8 go(A3) up_mv(1) horz(gate(28).e) right_mv(1) zig(pin(38,UP)) go(B3) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(28).e) right_mv(2) zig(pin(37,UP)) go(pin(8,OUT)) right_mv(6) junction {zig(pin(17,IN))} up_mv(4) left_mv(1) vert(pin(19,UP)) junction {horz(pin(19,UP))} zig(pin(20,UP)) # Gate 9 go(A2) up_mv(1) horz(gate(19).e) right_mv(1) zig(pin(28,UP)) go(B2) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(39).e) right_mv(1) vert(pin(38,DN)) dn_mv(2) right_mv(2) zig(pin(47,IN)) go(pin(9,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {zig(pin(20,DN))} {horz(pin(19,IN))} vert(pin(16,DN)) junction {horz(pin(16,DN))} zig(pin(15,UP)) # Gate 10 line left inwidth from 10th[].UP; "A" at last line .end - (0.1, 0) rjust; "1" at last line .end - (0.05, 0.1) rjust; move to last line .center; A1: junction line left inwidth from 10th [].DN; "B" at last line .end - (0.1, 0) rjust; "1" at last line .end - (0.05, 0.1) rjust; move to 1/2 <last line .center, last line .start>; B1: junction go(A1) vert(pin(10,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(20).e) right_mv(2) zig(pin(30,UP)) go(B1) dn_mv(2) horz(gate(30).e) right_mv(1) junction {zig(pin(39,UP))} right_mv(3) zig(pin(40,DN)) go(pin(10,OUT)) right_mv(2) junction {horz(pin(20,IN))} vert(pin(18,UP)) junction {horz(pin(18,UP))} vert(pin(16,UP)) junction {horz(pin(16,UP))} zig(pin(14,UP)) # Gate 11 go(pin(11, DN)) left_mv(3) vert(pin(11,UP)) up_mv(1) \ horz(gate(31).e) right_mv(1) zig(pin(41,DN)) go(pin(11,OUT)) right_mv(2) zig(pin(21,DN)) # Gate 12 go(pin(12,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(22,IN))} vert(pin(12,UP)) up_mv(1) horz(gate(12).w) left_mv(3) zig(pin(12,IN)) # Gate 13 go(pin(13,OUT)) right_mv(1) zig(pin(23,UP)) # Gate 14 go(pin(14,OUT)) horz(pin(24,IN)) # Gate 15 go(pin(15,OUT)) horz(pin(25,IN)) # Gate 16 go(pin(16,OUT)) right_mv(2) junction {horz(pin(26,IN))} vert(pin(27,UP)) junction {horz(pin(27,UP))} zig(pin(29,DN)) # Gate 17 go(pin(17,OUT)) horz(pin(27,IN)) # Gate 18 go(pin(18,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(28,IN))} zig(pin(27,DN)) # Gate 19 go(pin(19,OUT)) horz(pin(29,IN)) # Gate 20 go(pin(20,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(30,IN))} zig(pin(29,UP)) # Gate 21 go(pin(21,UP)) left_mv(2) vert(pin(21,DN)) ground go(pin(21,OUT)) right_mv(2) junction {zig(pin(31,DN))} up_mv(2) junction # Gate 22 go(pin(22,UP)) left_mv(3) up_mv(2) junction go(pin(22,DN)) left_mv(4) vert(pin(22,UP)) up_mv(3) right_mv(3) vert(pin(23,UP)) up_mv(3) horz(gate(23).e) right_mv(2) vert(pin(25,UP)) left_mv(1) vert(pin(28,DN)) right_mv(1) zig(pin(40,IN)) go(pin(22,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(32,IN))} {zig(pin(33,IN))} zig(pin(31,UP)) # Gate 23 go(pin(23,OUT)) right_mv(1) vert(gate(23).DN) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(33)) right_mv(1) dn_mv(1) to_bus # Gate 24 go(pin(24,OUT)) right_mv(1) zig(pin(33,UP)) # Gate 25 go(pin(25,OUT)) horz(pin(35,IN)) # Gate 26 go(pin(26,OUT)) right_mv(2) vert(pin(26,DN)) dn_mv(1) junction {to_bus} zig(pin(35,UP)) # Gate 27 go(pin(27,OUT)) right_mv(2) zig(pin(36,UP)) # Gate 28 go(pin(28,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(38,IN))} vert(pin(38, DN)) dn_mv(1) to_bus # Gate 29 go(pin(29,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(39,IN))} {vert(pin(39, DN)) dn_mv(1) to_bus} zig(pin(40,UP)) # Gate 30 go(pin(30,OUT)) right_mv(1) vert(pin(30,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(40).e) right_mv(2) zig(pin(50,UP)) # Gate 31 go(pin(31,OUT)) right_mv(2) zig(pin(41,UP)) # Gate 32 go(pin(32,OUT)) right_mv(2) vert(pin(32,UP)) junction {horz(pin(42,UP))} up_mv(1) to_bus # Gate 33 go(pin(33,OUT)) right_mv(2) zig(pin(43,UP)) # Gate 34 go(pin(34,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(44,IN))} vert(pin(44, DN)) dn_mv(1) to_bus # Gate 35 go(pin(35,OUT)) right_mv(1) dn_mv(1) right_mv(2) dn_mv(1) to_bus # Gate 36 go(pin(36,OUT)) horz(pin(46,IN)) # Gate 37 go(pin(37,OUT)) right_mv(2) vert(pin(48,UP)) junction {horz(pin(48,UP))} zig(pin(49,DN)) # Gate 38 go(pin(38,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(48,IN))} vert(pin(48,DN)) right_mv(1) dn_mv(3) left_mv(3) vert(pin(47,UP)) junction {horz(pin(47,UP))} zig(pin(46,UP)) # Gate 39 go(pin(39,OUT)) right_mv(3) junction {horz(pin(49,IN))} {vert(pin(49, DN)) dn_mv(2) to_bus} zig(pin(50,IN)) # Gate 40 go(pin(40,OUT)) right_mv(1) vert(pin(40,DN)) dn_mv(2) junction {horz(gate(40).w); dn_mv(1); horz(gate(40).e); right_mv(1)} dn_mv(1) junction zig(pin(49,UP)) # Gate 41 # (should be right_mv(2) but we've squeezed the bus line a bit left) go(pin(41,OUT)) right_mv(1) vert(pin(41,DN)) ground # Gate 42 go(pin(42,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 43 go(pin(43,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 44 go(pin(44,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 45 go(pin(45,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 46 go(pin(46,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 47 go(pin(47,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 48 go(pin(48,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 49 go(pin(49,OUT)) to_bus # Gate 50 go(pin(50,OUT)) to_bus # The adventitious lead go(pin(17,OUT)) right_mv(1) {vert(pin(17,UP)) up_mv(3) horz(gate(17))} vert(pin(17,DN)) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(27).w) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(27).e) dn_mv(1) horz(gate(36).w) up_mv(2) right_mv(1) dn_mv(2) right_mv(1) up_mv(2) right_mv(1) dn_mv(2) right_mv(1) up_mv(2) right_mv(1) vert(pin(37,DN)) right_mv(4) dn_mv(2) right_mv(3) dn_mv(1) left_mv(3) vert(pin(46,DN)) left_mv(3) dn_mv(3) horz(gate(36).w) up_mv(1) horz(gate(36)) right_mv(1) ] # End of diagram object .PE .ce 1 FIGURE 1. CIRCUITOUS DIAGRAM .bp .sp 10 .ps 8 .vs 10 .nf .cs R 24 .ec % .ds EO %(ci%v'-0.08'%h'-0.67'+%v'0.08' .%" This is dodgy, but it's the last place es is used .if n .ds es %o"O|" .if t .ds es %(es __________________________________________________________ |\ \ | \ 1. Logic gate. Inputs A, B. Output O = AB. \ | \ \ | \ \ 2. Logic gate. Inputs A, B, C. Output O = A+BC. \ | |\ \ \ | | \ \ 3. Logic gate. Inputs A, B. Output O = A+AB. \ | | \ \ \ | | |\ \ 4. Logic gate. Inputs A, B. Output O = AB %*(EO -(A+-B) \ | | | \ \ \ | | | \ \ 5. Logic gate. Inputs A, B. Output O = A%*(EOA + AA \ | | | \ \ \ | | | \ \ 6. Uninitialized flip-flop. Inputs none. Output O = ? \ | | | \ \ \ | | | \ \ 7. Flip-flop-flap. Inputs A, B, C. Output O = 1 if \ | | | \ \ A=0 or B+C=0 and A=1. O = 0 if AC=1, B=0. O = %*(es if \ | | | \ \ AB=1, C=0. O = ? if ABC=1. O as yet undetermined \ | | | \ \ for other Warmenhovian inputs. See Figure 2. \ | | | \ \ \ | | | \ \ 8. Bus line. \ | | | \ \_________________________________________________________\ | | | \ | | | | | | | _____________________________________________________ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | \|__| | | | \|__| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | \|__| \|__| .ec \ .cs R .fi .ps 10 .vs 12 .sp .ce 1 Table 1. Logical (and other) functions. .bp .if n \{\ .P [Warning: The following picture will be garbled or missing. Get a better output device.] \} .sp 10 .PS # The FLIP FLAP FLOP, Figure 2 of the INTERCAL manual down; A: warmengate(); move; move; B: warmengate(); move; move; C: warmengate(); move; move; D: warmengate(); dot at 1st []; dot at 2nd []; dot at 3rd []; circle rad 0.06 at last []; line from last circle.w to last circle.e; line from last circle.n to last circle.s; line left 3 from A.UP; "A" rjust line left 3 from B.IN; "B" rjust line left 3 from C.UP; "C" rjust line left 2 from C.IN then down 2 then left; "1" rjust right; circle rad 0.06 with .w at A.OUT; line right 0.5; junction {line right 1.5; "D" ljust} line down 0.25; X1: Here line left 0.5 from A.IN; line down 0.25; X2: Here line left 0.5 from B.UP; line up 0.25; line to X1; line right 1.0 from D.OUT; vert(B.UP) line up 0.25; line to X2; right; circle rad 0.06 with .w at B.OUT; line right 0.5; vert(C.DN) line down 0.25; X3: Here; line left 0.25 from D.UP then up 0.25 then to X3; right; circle rad 0.06 with .w at C.OUT; line right 0.3; vert(C.DN) line down 0.25; X4: Here line left 0.5 from D.IN; vert(D.UP) line up 0.25 then to X4; .PE .sp 10 .ce 1 FIGURE 2. FLIP FLAP FLOP .bp .if n \{\ .P [Warning: The following picture will be garbled or missing. Get a better output device.] \} .PS [ NYC: box ht 4 wid 0.5 "9"; for i = 0 to 16 do { move to (i+1)/18 <NYC.nw,NYC.sw> line left 0.5 } for i = 0 to 8 do { move to (i+1)/10 <NYC.ne,NYC.se> line right 0.5 } ] move right from last [].w; box invis wid 6 \ "GATE TYPE 9. BLACK BOX" ljust \ "INPUTS A1-8, B1-8. " ljust \ "OUTPUT O1-8 = A1-8~B1-8" ljust .PE .sp 10 .ce 1 FIGURE 1 (CONTINUED). NEW YORK .bp .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 4 "Return type of SELECT" .P INTERCAL-72 defined the return type of a select operation to depend on the number of bits selected. The C-INTERCAL compiler takes the easier route of defining the return type to be that of the right operand, independent of its actual value. This form has the advantage that all types can be determined at compile time. Putting in run-time type-checking would add significant overhead and complication, to effect a very minor change in language semantics. .P The only time this distinction makes any difference is when a unary operator is applied to the select result. This happens extremely rarely in practice, the only known instance being the 32-bit greater-than test in the standard library, where an XOR operator is applied to the result of selecting a number against itself. The INTERCAL-72 authors first select the result against #65535\*(ct#65535 to insure that XOR sees a 32-bit value. With the current compiler this extra step is unnecessary, but harmless. .P The cautious programmer should write code that does not depend on the compiler version being used. We therefore suggest the following guideline for determining the select return type: .P A select operation with a 16-bit right operand returns a 16-bit value. The return type of a select operation with a 32-bit right operand is undefined, but is guaranteed to be an acceptable input to a mingle operation so long as 16 or fewer bits are actually selected. Correct code should not depend on whether the return type is 16 or 32 bits.\} .H 3 "Unary Operators" .P The unary operators are & (logical \fBAND\fR), V (logical \fBOR\fR), and \*(vb (logical \fBXOR\fR). This last character is obtained by overpunching a worm (\-) on a V (V). .if '\*c'y' \{\ (In C-INTERCAL, \*(vb is replaced by what (?). The compiler recognizes V<backspace>- as a valid equivalent, in case you are concerned about compatibility with the Princeton compiler. In version 0.20 and later, the Unicode character U+2200 FOR ALL, which looks exactly like V<backspace>- or an upside-down `A' is also accepted in UTF-8 form.) \} The operator is inserted between the spot, two-spot, mesh, or what-have-you, and the integer, thus: .&123, #\*(vb123. Multiple unary operators may not be concatenated, thus the form #\*(vb&123 is invalid. This will be covered later when precedence is discussed. These operators perform their respective logical operations on all pairs of adjacent bits, the result from the first and last bits going into the first bit of the result. The effect is that of rotating the operand one place to the right and ANDing, ORing, or XORing with its initial value. Thus, #&77 (binary = 1001101) is binary 0000000000000100 = 4, #V77 is binary 1000000001101111 = 32879, and #\*(vb77 is binary 1000000001101011 = 32875. .H 3 "Precedence" .SETR precedence .P Precedence of operators is as follows: .sp 10 (The remainder of this page intentionally left blank)\*F .FS Keep in mind that the aim in designing INTERCAL was to have no precedents. .FE .bp .P This precedence (or lack thereof) may be overruled by grouping expressions between pairs of sparks (') or rabbit-ears ("). Thus '#165\*(ct#203'~#358 (binary value '10100101\*(ct11001011'~101100110) has the value 15, but #165\*(ct'#203~#358' has the value 34915, and #165\*(ct#203~#358 is invalid syntax and is completely valueless (except perhaps as an educational tool to the programmer). A unary operator is applied to a sparked or rabbit-eared expression by inserting the operator immediately following the opening spark or ears. Thus, the invalid expression #\*(vb&123, which was described earlier, could be coded as '\*(vb#&123' or '\*(vb"{"'. Note: In the interests of simplifying the sometimes overly-complex form of expressions, INTERCAL allows a spark-spot combination ('.) to be replaced with a wow (!). Thus '.1~.2' is equivalent to !1~.2', and 'V.1\*(ct.2' is equivalent to "V!1\*(ct.2'". .P Combining a rabbit-ears with a spot to form a rabbit (\o'".') is not permitted, although the programmer is free to use it should he find an EBCDIC reader which will properly translate a 12-3-7-8 punch. .P Sparks and/or rabbit-ears must also be used to distinguish among such otherwise ambiguous subscripted and multiply-subscripted expressions as: .DS L ,1 SUB #1 ~ #2 ,1 SUB ,2 SUB #1 #2 #3 ,1 SUB " ,2 SUB " ,3 SUB #1 " #2 " " #3 " .DE The third case may be isolated into either of its possible interpretations by simply changing some pairs of rabbit-ears to sparks, instead of adding more ears (which would only confuse the issue further). Ambiguous cases are defined as those for which the compiler being used finds a legitimate interpretation which is different from that which the user had in mind. See also section .GETHN princeton \&. .H 1 "STATEMENTS" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "There's glory for you!" .P "I don't know what you mean by 'glory,'" Alice said. .P Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. "Of course you don't -- till I tell you. I meant 'there's a nice knock-down argument for you!'" .P "But 'glory' doesn't mean 'a nice knock-down argument.'" Alice objected. .P "When \fII\fR use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less." .DE \} .P In this section is described the format of INTERCAL statements. .H 2 "General Format" .P Statements may be entered in 'free format'. That is, more than one statement may occur on a single card, and a statement may begin on one card and end on a later one. Note that if this is done, all intervening cards and portions thereof must be part of the same statement. That this restriction is necessary is immediately apparent from the following example of what might occur if statements could be interlaced. .DS L DO .1 <- ".1\*(ct'&:51~"#\*(vb1c!12~;&75SUB"\*(vb'V.1~ DO .2 <- '"!1\*(ct"&';\*(vb79SUB",&7SUB:173"'~!\*(vb9\*(ct .2'\*(ct,&1SUB:5~#33578"'"'"~'#65535\*(ct"\*(vb'V#&85'"' #8196'"'~.1"\*(ct.2'~'#&5\*(ct"'#1279\*(ct#4351'~#65535"' .DE The above statements are obviously meaningless. (For that matter, so are the statements .DS L DO .1 <- ".1\*(ct"&:51~"#\*(vb1\*(ct!12~;&75SUB"\*(vb'V.1~ .2'\*(ct,&1SUB:5~#333578"'"'"~#65535\*(ct"\*(vb'V#&85'"' DO .2 <- '"!1\*(ct"&';\*(vb79SUB",&7SUB:173"'~!\*(vb9\*(ct #8196'"'~.1"\*(ct.2'~'#&5\*(ct"'#1279\*(ct#4351'~#65535"' .DE but this is not of interest here.) .P Spaces may be used freely to enhance program legibility (or at least reduce program illegibility), with the restriction that no word of a statement identifier (see section .GETHN identifiers ) may contain any spaces. .H 2 "Labels" .P A statement may begin with a .B "logical line label" enclosed in wax-wane pairs (()). A statement may not have more than one label, although it is possible to omit the label entirely. A line label is any integer from 1 to 65535, which must be unique within each program. The user is cautioned, however, that many line labels between 1000 and 1999 are used in the INTERCAL System Library functions. .H 2 "Identifiers and Qualifiers" .SETR identifiers .P After the line label (if any), must follow one of the following statement identifiers: DO, PLEASE, or PLEASE DO. These may be used interchangeably to improve the aesthetics of the program. The identifier is then followed by either, neither, or both of the following optional parameters (qualifiers): (1) either of the character strings NOT or N'T, which causes the statement to be automatically abstained from (see section .GETHN abstain ) when execution begins, and (2) a number between 0 and 100, preceded by a double-oh-seven (%), which causes the statement to have only the specified percent chance of being executed each time it is encountered in the course of execution. .H 2 "Statements" .P Following the qualifiers (or, if none are used, the identifier) must occur one of the .ie '\*c'y' \{\ 14 \} .el \{\ 13 \} valid operations. (Exception: see section .GETHN comments \&.) These are described individually in sections .GETHN calculate through .GETHN last_statement \&. .H 3 "Calculate" .SETR calculate .P The INTERCAL equivalent of the half-mesh (=) in FORTRAN, BASIC, PL/I, and others, is represented by an angle (<) followed by a worm (-). This combination is read 'gets'. 32-bit variables may be assigned 16-bit values, which are padded on the left with 16 zero bits. 16-bit variables may be assigned 32-bit values only if the value is less than 65535. Thus, to invert the least significant bit of the first element of 16-bit 2-dimensional array number 1, one could write: .DS ,1SUB#1#1 <- '\*(vb",1SUB#1#1"\*(ct#1'~'#0\*(ct#65535' .DE Similarly to SNOBOL and SPITBOL, INTERCAL uses the angle-worm to define the dimensions of arrays. An example will probably best describe the format. To define 32-bit array number 7 as 3-dimensional, the first dimension being seven, the second being the current value of 16-bit variable number seven, and the third being the current value of the seventh element of 16-bit array number seven (which is one-dimensional) mingled with the last three bits of 32-bit variable number seven, one would write (just before they came to take him away): .DS ;7 <- #7 BY .7 BY ",7SUB#7"\*(ct':7~#7' .DE This is, of course, different from the statement: .DS ;7 <- #7 BY .7 BY ,7SUB"#7\*(ct':7~#7'" .DE INTERCAL also permits the redefining of array dimensioning, which is done the same way as is the initial dimensioning. All values of items in an array are lost upon redimensioning, unless they have been STASHed (see section .GETHN stash ), in which case restoring them also restores the old dimensions. .H 3 "NEXT" .SETR next .P The NEXT statement is used both for subroutine calls and for unconditional transfers. This statement takes the form: .DS DO (label) NEXT .DE (or, of course, .DS PLEASE DO (label) NEXT .DE etc.), where (label) represents any logical line label which appears in the program. The effect of such a statement is to transfer control to the statement specified, and to store in a push down list (which is initially empty) the location from which the transfer takes place. Items may be removed from this list and may be discarded or used to return to the statement immediately following the NEXT statement. These operations are described in sections .GETHN forget and .GETHN resume respectively. The programmer is generally advised to discard any stack entries which he does not intend to utilize, since the stack has a maximum depth of 79 entries. A program's attempting to initiate an 80th level of NEXTing will result in the fatal error message, "PROGRAM HAS DISAPPEARED INTO THE BLACK LAGOON." .H 3 "FORGET" .SETR forget .P The statement PLEASE FORGET exp, where exp represents any expression (except colloquial and facial expressions), causes the expression to be evaluated, and the specified number of entries to be removed from the NEXTing stack and discarded. An attempt to FORGET more levels of NEXTing than are currently stacked will cause the stack to be emptied, and no error condition is indicated. This is because the condition is not considered to be an error. As described in section .GETHN next \&, it is good programming practice to execute a DO FORGET #1 after using a NEXT statement as an unconditional transfer, so that the stack does not get cluttered up with unused entries: .DS L .cs R 24 DO (123) NEXT . . (123) DO FORGET #1 .cs R .DE .H 3 "RESUME" .SETR resume .P The statement PLEASE RESUME exp has the same effect as FORGET, except that program control is returned to the statement immediately following the NEXT statement which stored in the stack the last entry to be removed. Note that a rough equivalent of the FORTRAN computed GO TO and BASIC ON exp GO TO is performed by a sequence of the form: .DS L .cs R 24 DO (1) NEXT . . (1) DO (2) NEXT PLEASE FORGET #1 . . (2) DO RESUME .1 .cs R .DE Unlike the FORGET statement, an attempt to RESUME more levels of NEXTing than has been stacked will cause program termination. See also section .GETHN give_up \&. .H 3 "STASH" .SETR stash .P Since subroutines are not explicitly implemented in INTERCAL, the NEXT and RESUME statements must be used to execute common routines. However, as these routines might use the same variables as the main program, it is necessary for them to save the values of any variables whose values they alter, and later restore them. This process is simplified by the STASH statement, which has the form DO STASH list, where list represents a string of one or more variable or array names, separated by intersections (+). Thus .DS PLEASE STASH .123+:123+,123 .DE stashes the values of two variables and one entire array. The values are left intact, and copies thereof are saved for later retrieval by (what else?) the RETRIEVE statement (see section .GETHN retrieve ). It is not possible to STASH single array items. .H 3 "RETRIEVE" .SETR retrieve .P PLEASE RETRIEVE list restores the previously STASHed values of the variables and arrays named in the list. If a value has been stashed more than once, the most recently STASHed values are RETRIEVEd, and a second RETRIEVE will restore the second most recent values STASHed. Attempting to RETRIEVE a value which has not been STASHed will result in the error message, "THROW STICK BEFORE RETRIEVING." .H 3 "IGNORE" .SETR ignore .P The statement DO IGNORE list causes all subsequent statements to have no effect upon variables and/or arrays named in the list. Thus, for example, after the sequence .DS L DO .1 <- #1 PLEASE IGNORE .1 DO .1 <- #0 .DE 16-bit variable number 1 would have the value 1, not 0. Inputting (see section .GETHN input ) into an IGNOREd variable also has no effect. The condition is annulled via the REMEMBER statement (see section .GETHN remember ). Note that, when a variable is being IGNOREd, its value, though immutable, is still available for use in expressions and the like. .if '\*c'y' \{\ .P Though the INTERCAL-72 manual laid down that the value of an IGNOREd variable cannot change, it was unclear about whether or not a statement which appears to change an IGNOREd variable is executed or not. This may appear to be a "If a tree falls in the forest ..." type of question, but if the statement in question has other side effects it is not. .P Since another mechanism already exists for ABSTAINing from a statement, C-INTERCAL's IGNORE only prevents the changing of the specific variable in question, not the execution of the entire statement. In the present version of the language this only makes a difference for the WRITE IN (see .GETHN input ) and RETRIEVE (see .GETHN retrieve ) statements. Attempting to WRITE IN to an IGNOREd variable will cause a number to be read from the input, which will be discarded since it cannot be stored in the variable. Using RETRIEVE on an IGNOREd variable will pop the variable's stash stack without actually changing its value. \} .H 3 "REMEMBER" .SETR remember .P PLEASE REMEMBER list terminates the effect of the IGNORE statement for all variables and/or arrays named in the list. It does not matter if a variable has been IGNOREd more than once, nor is it an error if the variable has not been IGNOREd at all. .H 3 "ABSTAIN" .SETR abstain .P INTERCAL contains no simple equivalent to an IF statement or computed GO TO, making it difficult to combine similar sections of code into a single routine which occasionally skips around certain statements. The IGNORE statement (see section .GETHN ignore ) is helpful in some cases, but a more viable method is often required. In keeping with the goal of INTERCAL having nothing in common with any other language, this is made possible via the ABSTAIN statement. .P This statement takes on one of two forms. It may not take on both at any one time. DO ABSTAIN FROM (label) causes the statement whose logical line label is (label) to be abstained from. PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM gerund list causes all statements of the specified type(s) to be abstained from, as in .DS L .ta .3i .6i T .6i PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM STASHING PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM IGNORING + FORGETTING PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM NEXTING or PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM CALCULATING .DE Statements may also be automatically abstained from at the start of execution via the NOT or N'T parameter (see section .GETHN identifiers ). .P If, in the course of execution, a statement is encountered which is being abstained from, it is ignored and control passes to the next statement in the program (unless it, too, is being abstained from). .P The statement DO ABSTAIN FROM ABSTAINING is perfectly valid, as is DO ABSTAIN FROM REINSTATING (although this latter is not usually recommended). However, the statement DO ABSTAIN FROM GIVING UP is not accepted, even though DON'T GIVE UP is. .H 3 "REINSTATE" .SETR reinstate .P The REINSTATE statement, like the ABSTAIN, takes as an argument either a line label or a gerund list. No other form of argument is permitted. For example, the following is an invalid argument: .DS L Given: x\(!=0, y\(!=0, Prove: x+y=0 Since x\(!=0, then x+1\(!=1, x+a\(!=a, x+y\(!=y. But what is y? y is anything but 0. Thus x+y \(!= anything but 0. Since x+y cannot equal anything but 0, x+y=0. Q.E.D. .DE REINSTATEment nullifies the effects of an abstention. Either form of REINSTATEment can be used to "free" a statement, regardless of whether the statement was abstained from by gerund list, line label, or NOT. Thus, PLEASE REINSTATE REINSTATING is not necessarily an irrelevant statement, since it might free a DON'T REINSTATE command or a REINSTATE the line label of which was abstained from. However, DO REINSTATE GIVING UP is invalid, and attempting to REINSTATE a GIVE UP statement by line label will have no effect. Note that this insures that DON'T GIVE UP will always be a "do-nothing" statement. .H 3 "GIVE UP" .SETR give_up .P PLEASE GIVE UP is used to exit from a program. It has the effect of a PLEASE RESUME #80. DON'T GIVE UP, as noted in section .GETHN reinstate \&, is effectively a null statement. .H 3 "Input" .SETR input .P Input is accomplished with the statement DO WRITE IN list, where list represents a string of variables and/or elements of arrays, separated by intersections. Numbers are represented on cards, each number on a separate card, by spelling out each digit (in English) and separating the digits with one or more spaces. A zero (0) may be spelled as either ZERO or OH. Thus the range of (32-bit) input values permissible extends from ZERO (or OH) through FOUR TWO NINE FOUR NINE SIX SEVEN TWO NINE FIVE. .if '\*c'y' \{\ (For the convenience of aviators, C-INTERCAL accepts the spelling NINER for NINE. In the service of internationalization, C-INTERCAL also accepts input digits in Sanskrit, Basque, Tagalog, Classical Nahuatl, Georgian, Kwakiutl, and Volapuk.) \} .P Attempting to write in a value greater than or equal to SIX FIVE FIVE THREE SIX for a 16-bit variable will result in the error message, "DON'T BYTE OFF MORE THAN YOU CAN CHEW." .if '\*c'y' \{\ .P (See also section .GETHN communication for a description of C-INTERCAL's character I/O.) \} .H 3 "Output" .P Values may be output to the printer, one value per line, via the statement DO READ OUT list, where the list contains variables, array elements, and/or constants. Output is in the form of "extended" Roman numerals (also called "butchered" Roman numerals), with an overline .if t (\(rn) indicating the value below is "times 1000", and lower-case letters indicating "times 1000000". Zero is indicated by an overline with no character underneath. Thus, the range of (32-bit) output values possible is from .if t \(rn .if n \{\ .nf _ .fi \} through .ie t \o"i\(rn"\o"v\(rn"ccxciv\o"C\(rn"\o"M\(rn"\o"L\(rn"\o"X\(rn"\o"V\(rn"\o"I\(rn"\o"I\(rn"CCXCV. .el \{\ .br .nf __ ____________ ivccxcivCMLXVIICCXCV. .fi \} Note: For values whose residues modulo 1000000 are less than 4000, M is used to represent 1000; for values whose residues are 4000 or greater, .if t \o"I\(rn" .if n \{\ .nf _ I .fi \} .\" This is the one place we corrected the original manual. is used. Thus #3999 would read out as MMMCMXCIX \*F while #4000 would .FS The original INTERCAL-72 manual claimed that #3999 should render as MMMIM, but the C-INTERCAL developers have been unable to find an algorithm that does this and is consistent with the rest of the rules. .FE readout as .if t \o"I\(rn"\o"V\(rn". .if n \{\ .nf __ IV .fi \} Similar rules apply to the use of .if t \o"M\(rn" .if n \{\ .nf _ M .fi \} and i for 1000000, and to that of m and .if t \o"i\(rn" .if n \{\ .nf _ i .fi \} for 1000000000. .if '\*c'y' \{\ .P (See also section .GETHN communication for a description of C-INTERCAL's character I/O.) \} .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 3 "COME FROM" .P In which we try to precisely define a statement that should never have been born, but is nevertheless one of the more useful statements in INTERCAL. .H 4 "Background" .P The earliest known description of the COME FROM statement in the computing literature is in [R. L. Clark, "A linguistic contribution to GOTO-less programming," Commun. ACM 27 (1984), pp. 349-350], part of the famous April Fools issue of CACM. The subsequent rush by language designers to include the statement in their languages was underwhelming, one might even say nonexistent. It was therefore decided that COME FROM would be an appropriate addition to C-INTERCAL. .H 4 "Description" .P There are two useful ways to visualize the action of the COME FROM statement. The simpler is to see that it acts like a GOTO when the program is traced backwards in time. More precisely, the statements .DS L (1) DO <any statement> . . . (2) DO COME FROM (1) .DE should be thought of as being equivalent to .DS L (1) DO <any statement> (2) DO GOTO (3) . . . (3) DO NOTHING .DE if INTERCAL actually had a GOTO statement at all, which of course it doesn't. .P What this boils down to is that the statement DO COME FROM (label), anywhere in the program, places a kind of invisible trap door immediately after statement (label). Execution or abstention of that statement is immediately followed by an unconditional jump to the COME FROM, unless the (label)ed statement is an executed NEXT, in which case the jump occurs if the program attempts to RESUME back to that NEXT statement. It is an error for more than one COME FROM to refer to the same (label). .P Modification of the target statement by ABSTAIN or by the % qualifier affects only that statement, not the subsequent jump. Such modifications to the COME FROM itself, however, do affect the jump. Encountering the COME FROM statement itself, rather than its target, has no effect. \} .SETR last_statement .H 2 "Comments" .SETR comments .P Unrecognizable statements, as noted in section .GETHN error_messages \&, are flagged with a splat (*) during compilation, and are not considered fatal errors unless they are encountered during execution, at which time the statement (as input at compilation time) is printed and execution is terminated. This allows for an interesting (and, by necessity, unique) means of including comments in an INTERCAL listing. For example, the statement: .sp 1 * PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS LINE HAS NO EFFECT .P will be ignored during execution due to the inclusion of the NOT qualifier. User-supplied error messages are also easy to implement: .sp 1 * DO SOMETHING ABOUT OVERFLOW IN ;3 .P as are certain simple conditional errors: .DS L .cs R 24 * (123) DON'T YOU REALIZE THIS STATEMENT SHOULD ONLY BE ENCOUNTERED ONCE? PLEASE REINSTATE (123) .cs R .DE This pair of statements will cause an error exit the second time they are encountered. Caution!! The appearance of a statement identifier in an intended comment will be taken as the beginning of a new .\" CORRECTION: .\" "comment example above" was originally "example on the preceding page" .\" We can't rely on page boundaries any more. statement. Thus, the first comment example above could not have been: .sp 1 * PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS LINE DOES NOTHING .P The third example, however, is valid, despite the appearance of two cases of D-space-O, since INTERCAL does not ignore extraneous spaces in statement identifiers. .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 1 "OUTSIDE COMMUNICATION" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F She puzzled over this for some time, but at last a bright thought struck her. "Why, it's a Looking-glass book, of course! And, if I hold it up to a glass, the words will all go the right way again." .DE \} .SETR communication .P In which we try to remedy the fact that, due to I/O limitations, INTERCAL can not even in principle perform the same tasks as other languages. It is hoped that this addition will permit INTERCAL users to waste vast quantities of computer time well into the 21st century. .H 2 "Motivation" .P One of the goals of INTERCAL was to provide a language which, though different from all other languages, is nevertheless theoretically capable of all the same tasks. INTERCAL-72 failed to accomplish this because its I/O functions could not handle arbitrary streams of bits, or even arbitrary sequences of characters. A language which can't even send its input directly to its output can hardly be considered as capable as other languages. .H 2 "Turing Text Model" .P To remedy this problem, character I/O is now provided in a form based on the "Turing Text" model, originally proposed by Jon Blow. The C-INTERCAL programmer can access this capability by placing a one-dimensional array in the list of items given to a WRITE IN or READ OUT statement. On execution of the statement, the elements of the array will, from first to last, be either loaded from the input or sent to the output, as appropriate, in the manner described below. There is currently no support for I/O involving higher-dimensional arrays, but some form of graphics might be a possible 2-D interpretation. .P The heart of the Turing Text model is the idea of a continuous loop of tape containing, in order, all the characters in the machine's character set. When a character is received by the input routine, the tape is advanced the appropriate number of spaces to bring that character under the tape head, and the number of spaces the tape was moved is the number that is actually seen by the INTERCAL program. Another way to say this is that the number placed in an INTERCAL array is the difference between the character just received and the previous character, modulo the number of characters in the machine character set. .P Output works in just the opposite fashion, except that the characters being output come from the other side of the tape. From this position the characters on the tape appear to be in reverse order, and are individually backwards as well. (We would show you what it looks like, but we don't have a font with backwards letters available. Use your imagination.) The effect is that a number is taken out of an INTERCAL array, subtracted from the last character output -- i.e., the result of the last subtraction -- and then sent on down the output channel. The only catch is that the character as seen by the INTERCAL program is the mirror-image of the character as seen by the machine and the user. The bits of the character are therefore taken in reverse order as it is sent to the output. Note that this bit reversal affects only the character seen by the outside world; it does not affect the character stored internally by the program, from which the next output number will be subtracted. All subtractions are done modulo the number of characters in the character set. .P Two different tapes are used for input and output to allow for future expansion of the language to include multiple input and output channels. Both tapes start at character 0 when a program begins execution. On input, when an end-of-file marker is reached the number placed in the array is one greater than the highest-numbered character on the tape. .H 2 "Example Program" .P If all this seems terribly complicated, it should be made perfectly clear by the following example program, which simply maps its input to its output (like a simplified UNIX "cat"). It assumes that characters are 8 bits long, but that's fine since the current version of C-INTERCAL does too. It uses the standard library routines for addition and subtraction. .DS L .cs R 24 DO ,1 <- #1 DO .4 <- #0 DO .5 <- #0 DO COME FROM (30) DO WRITE IN ,1 DO .1 <- ,1SUB#1 DO (10) NEXT PLEASE GIVE UP (20) PLEASE RESUME '?.1$#256'~'#256$#256' (10) DO (20) NEXT DO FORGET #1 DO .2 <- .4 DO (1000) NEXT DO .4 <- .3~#255 DO .3 <- !3~#15'$!3~#240' DO .3 <- !3~#15'$!3~#240' DO .2 <- !3~#15'$!3~#240' DO .1 <- .5 DO (1010) NEXT DO .5 <- .2 DO ,1SUB#1 <- .3 (30) PLEASE READ OUT ,1 .cs R .DE For each number received in the input array, the program first tests the #256 bit to see if the end of file has been reached. If not, the previous input character is subtracted off to obtain the current input character. Then the order of the bits is reversed to find out what character should be sent to the output, and the result is subtracted from the last character sent. Finally, the difference is placed in an array and given to a READ OUT statement. See? We told you it was simple! \} .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 1 "TriINTERCAL" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "-- oh dear, how puzzling it all is! I'll try if I know all the things I used to know. Let me see: four times five is twelve, and four times six is thirteen, and four times seven is -- oh dear! I shall never get to twenty at that rate!" .DE \} .SETR tri_intercal .P In which it is revealed that bitwise operations are too ordinary for hard-core INTERCAL programmers, and extensions to other bases are discussed. These are not, strictly speaking, extensions to INTERCAL itself, but rather new dialects sharing most of the features of the parent language. .H 2 "Motivation" .P INTERCAL is really a pretty sissy language. It tries hard to be different, but when you get right down to its roots, what do you find? You find bits, that's what. Plain old ones and zeroes, in groups of 16 and 32, just like every other language you've ever heard of. And what operations can you perform on these bits? The INTERCAL operators may arrange and permute them in weird and wonderful ways, but at the bit level the operators are the same AND, OR and XOR you've seen countless times before. .P Once the prospective INTERCAL programmer masters the unusual syntax, she finds herself working with the familiar Boolean operators on perfectly ordinary unsigned integer words. Even the constants she uses are familiar. After all, who would not immediately recognize #65535 and #32768? It may take a just a moment more to figure out #65280, and #21845 and #43690 could be puzzles until she notices that they sum to #65535, but basically she's still on her home turf. The 16-bit limit on constants actually works in the programmer's favor by insuring that very long anonymous constants cannot appear in INTERCAL programs. And this is in a language that is supposed to be different from any other! .H 2 "Abandon All Hope..." .P Standard INTERCAL is based on variables consisting of ordinary bits and familiar Boolean operations on those bits. In pursuit of uniqueness, it seems appropriate to provide a new dialect, otherwise identical to INTERCAL, which instead uses variables consisting of trits, i.e. ternary digits, and operators based on tritwise logical operations. This is intended to be a separate dialect, rather than an extension to INTERCAL itself, for a number of reasons. Doing it this way avoids word-length conflicts, does not spoil the elegance of the Spartan INTERCAL operator set, and dodges the objections of those who might feel it too great an alteration to the original language. Primarily, though, giving INTERCAL programmers the ability to switch numeric base at will amounts to excessive functionality. So much better that a programmer choose a base at the outset and then be forced to stick with it for the remainder of the program. .H 2 "Compiler Operation" .P The same compiler, ick, supports both INTERCAL and TriINTERCAL. This has the advantage that future bug fixes and additions to the language not related to arithmetic immediately apply to both versions. The compiler recognizes INTERCAL source files by the extension '.i', and TriINTERCAL source files by the extension '.3i'. It's as simple as that. There is no way to mix INTERCAL and TriINTERCAL source in the same program, and it is not always possible to determine which dialect a program is written in just by looking at the source code. .H 2 "Data Types" .P The two TriINTERCAL data types are 10-trit unsigned integers and 20-trit unsigned integers. All INTERCAL syntax for distinguishing data types is ported to these new types in the obvious way. Small words may contain numbers from #0 to #59048; large words may contain numbers from #0$#0 to #59048$#59048. Errors are signaled for constants greater than #59048 and for attempts to WRITE IN numbers too large for a given variable or array element to hold. .P Note that though TriINTERCAL considers all numbers to be unsigned, nothing prevents the programmer from implementing arithmetic operations that treat their operands as signed. Three's complement is one obvious choice, but balanced ternary notation is also a possibility. This latter is a very pretty and symmetrical system in which all 2 trits are treated as if they had the value -1. .H 2 "Operators" .P The TriINTERCAL operators are designed to inherit the relevant properties of the standard INTERCAL operators, so that both can be considered as merely different aspects of the same Platonic ideal. (Not that the word "ideal" is ever particularly relevant when used in connection with INTERCAL.) .H 3 "Binary Operators I" .P The binary operators carry over from the original language with only minor changes. The mingle operator ($) creates a 20-trit word by alternating trits from its two 10-trit operands. The select operator (~) is a little more complicated, since the ternary tritmask may contain 0, 1, and 2 trits. If we observe that the select operation on binary operands amounts to a bitwise AND and some rearrangement of bits, it seems appropriate to base the select for ternary operands on a tritwise AND in the analogous fashion. We therefore postpone the definition of select until we know what a tritwise AND looks like. .H 3 "Unary Operators" .P The unary operators in INTERCAL are all derived from the familiar Boolean operations on single bits. To extend these operations to trits, we first ask ourselves what the important properties of these operations are that we wish to be preserved, then design the tritwise operators so that they behave in a similar fashion. .H 4 "Unary Logical Operators" .P Let's start with AND and OR. To begin with, these can be considered "choice" or "preference" operators, as they always return one of their operands. AND can be described as wanting to return 0, but returning 1 if it is given no other choice, i.e., if both operands are 1. Similarly, OR wants to return 1 but returns 0 if that is its only choice. From this it is immediately apparent that each operator has an identity element that "always loses", and a dominator element that "always wins". .P AND and OR are commutative and associative, and each distributes over the other. They are also symmetric with each other, in the sense that AND looks like OR and OR looks like AND when the roles of 0 and 1 are interchanged (De Morgan's Laws). This symmetry property seems to be a key element to the idea that these are logical, rather than arithmetic, operators. In a three-valued logic we would similarly expect a three-way symmetry among the three values 0, 1 and 2 and the three operators AND, OR and (of course) BUT. .P The following tritwise operations have all the desired properties: OR returns the greater of its two operands. That is, it returns 2 if it can get it, else it tries to return 1, and it returns 0 only if both operands are 0. AND wants to return 0, will return 2 if it can't get 0, and returns 1 only if forced. BUT wants 1, will take 0, and tries to avoid 2. The equivalents to De Morgan's Laws apply to rotations of the three elements, e.g., 0 -> 1, 1 -> 2, 2 -> 0. Each operator distributes over exactly one other operator, so the property "X distributes over Y" is not transitive. The question of which way this distributivity ring goes around is left as an exercise for the student. .P In TriINTERCAL programs the whirlpool (@) denotes the unary tritwise BUT operation. You can think of the whirlpool as drawing values preferentially towards the central value 1. Alternatively, you can think of it as drawing your soul and your sanity inexorably down ... .P On the other hand, maybe it's best you \fInot\fR think of it that way. .P A few comments about how these operators can be used. OR acts like a tritwise maximum operation. AND can be used with tritmasks. 0's in a mask wipe out the corresponding elements in the other operand, while 1's let the corresponding elements pass through unchanged. 2's in a mask consolidate the values of nonzero elements, as both 1's and 2's in the other operand yield 2's in the output. BUT can be used to create "partial tritmasks". 0's in a mask let BUT eliminate 2's from the other operand while leaving other values unchanged. Of course, the symmetry property guarantees that the operators don't really behave differently from each other in any fundamental way; the apparent differences come from the intuitive view that a 0 trit is "not set" while a 1 or 2 trit is "set". .H 4 "Binary Operators II" .P At this point we can define select, since we now know what the tritwise AND looks like. Select takes the binary tritwise AND of its two operands. It shifts all the trits of the result corresponding to 2's in the right operand over to the right (low) end of the result, then follows them with all the output trits corresponding to 1's in the right operand. Trits corresponding to 0's in the right operand, which are all 0 anyway, occupy the remaining space at the left end of the output word. Both 10-trit and 20-trit operands are accepted, and are padded with zeroes on the left if necessary. The output type is determined the same way as in standard C-INTERCAL. .H 4 "Unary Arithmetic Operators" .P Now that we've got all that settled, what about XOR? This is easily the most-useful of the three unary INTERCAL operators, because it combines in one package the operations ADD WITHOUT CARRY, SUBTRACT WITHOUT BORROW, BITWISE NOT-EQUAL, and BITWISE NOT. In TriINTERCAL we can't have all of these in the same operator, since addition and subtraction are no longer the same thing. The solution is to split the XOR concept into two operators. The ADD WITHOUT CARRY operation is represented by the new sharkfin (^), while the old what (?) represents SUBTRACT WITHOUT BORROW. The reason for this choice is so that what (?) will also represent the TRITWISE NOT-EQUAL operation. .P Note that what (?), unlike the other four unary operators, is not symmetrical. It should be thought of as rotating its operand one trit to the right (with wraparound) and then subtracting off the trits of the original number. These subtractions are done without borrowing, i.e., trit-by-trit modulo 3. .H 3 "Examples" .P The TriINTERCAL operators really aren't all that bad once you get used to them. Let's look at a few examples to show how they can be used in practice. In all of these examples the input value is contained in the 10-trit variable .3. .P In INTERCAL, single-bit values often have to be converted from {0,1} to {1,2} for use in RESUME statements. Examples of how to do this appear in the original manual. In TriINTERCAL the expression "^.3$#1"~#1 sends 0 -> 1 and 1 -> 2. If the 1-trit input value can take on any of its three possible states, however, we will also have to deal with the 2 case. The expression "V.3$#1"~#1 sends {0,1} -> 1 and 2 -> 2. To test if a trit is set, we can use "V'"&.3$#2"~#1'$#1"~#1, sending 0 -> 1 and {1,2} -> 2. To reverse the test we use "?'"&.3$#2"~#1'$#1"~#1, sending 0 -> 2 and {1,2} -> 1. Note that we have not been taking full advantage of the new select operator. These last two expressions can be simplified into "V!3~#2'$#1"~#1 and "?!3~#2'$#1"~#1, which perform exactly the same mappings. Finally, if we need a 3-way test, we can use "@'"^.3$#7"~#4'$#2"~#10, which obviously sends 0 -> 1, 1 -> 2, and 2 -> 3. .P For an unrelated example, the expression "^.3$.3"~"#0$#29524" converts all of the 1-trits of .3 into 2's and all of the 2-trits into 1's. In balanced ternary, where 2-trits represent -1 values, this is the negation operation. .H 2 "Beyond Ternary..." .P While we're at it, we might as well extend this multiple bases business a little farther. The ick compiler actually recognizes filename suffixes of the form '.Ni', where N is any number from 2 to 7. 2 of course gives standard INTERCAL, while 3 gives TriINTERCAL. We cut off before 8 because octal notation is the smallest base used to facilitate human-to-machine communication, and this seems quite contrary to the basic principles behind INTERCAL. The small data types hold 16 bits, 10 trits, 8 quarts, 6 quints, 6 sexts, or 5 septs, and the large types are always twice this size. .P As for operators, ? is always SUBTRACT WITHOUT BORROW, and ^ is always ADD WITHOUT CARRY. V is the OR operation and always returns the max of its inputs. & is the AND operation, which chooses 0 if possible but otherwise returns the max of the inputs. @ is BUT, which prefers 1, then 0, then the max of the remaining possibilities. Rather than add more special symbols forever, a numeric modifier may be placed directly before the @ to indicate the operation that prefers one of the digits not already represented. Thus in files ending in '.5i', the permitted unary operators are ?, ^, &, @, 2@, 3@, and V. Use of such barbarisms as 0@ to represent & are not permitted, nor is the use of @ or ^ in files with either of the extensions '.i' or '.2i'. Why not? You just can't, that's why. Don't ask so many questions. .P As a closing example, we note that in balanced quinary notation, where 3 means -2 and 4 means -1, the negation operation can be written as either .DS L DO .1 <- "^'"^.3$.3"~"#0$#3906"'$'"^.3$.3"~"#0$#3906"'"~"#0$#3906" .DE or as .DS L DO .1 <- "^.3$.3"~"#0$#3906" DO .1 <- "^.1$.1"~"#0$#3906" .DE These work because multiplication by -1 is the same as multiplication by 4, modulo 5. .P Now go beat your head against the wall for a while.\} .H 1 "SUBROUTINE LIBRARY" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "You don't know what you're talking about!" cried Humpty Dumpty. "How many days are there in a year?" .P "Three hundred and sixty-five," said Alice. .P "And how many birthdays have you?" .P "One." .P "And if you take one from three hundred and sixty-five, what remains?" .P "Three hundred and sixty-four, of course." .P Humpty Dumpty looked doubtful. "I'd rather see that done on paper," he said. .DE \} .SETR sublib .P INTERCAL provides several built-in subroutines to which control can be transferred to perform various operations. These operations include many useful functions which are not easily representable in INTERCAL, such as addition, subtraction, etc. .H 2 "Usage" .P In general, the operands are .1, .2, etc., or :1, :2, etc., and the result(s) are stored in what would have been the next operand(s). For instance, one routine adds .1 to .2 and stores the sum in .3, with .4 being used to indicate overflow. All variables not used for results are left unchanged. .H 2 "Available Functions" .SETR functions .P At the time of this writing, only the most fundamental operations are offered in the library, as a more complete selection would require prohibitive time and core to implement. These functions, along with their corresponding entry points (entered via DO (entry) NEXT) are listed below. .DS L .cs R 24 (1000) .3 <- .1 plus .2, error exit on overflow (1009) .3 <- .1 plus .2 .4 <- #1 if no overflow, else .4 <- #2 (1010) .3 <- .1 minus .2, no action on overflow (1020) .1 <- .1 plus #1, no action on overflow (1030) .3 <- .1 times .2, error exit on overflow (1039) .3 <- .1 times .2 .4 <- #1 if no overflow, else .4 <- #2 (1040) .3 <- .1 divided by .2 .3 <- #0 if .2 is #0 (1050) .2 <- :1 divided by .1, error exit on overflow .2 <- #0 if .1 is #0 (1500) :3 <- :1 plus :2, error exit on overflow (1509) :3 <- :1 plus :2 :4 <- #1 if no overflow, else :4 <- #2 (1510) :3 <- :1 minus :2, no action on overflow (1520) :1 <- .1 concatenated with .2 (1525) This subroutine is intended solely for internal use within the subroutine library and is therefore not described here. Its effect is to shift .3 logically 8 bits to the left. (1530) :1 <- .1 times .2 (1540) :3 <- :1 times :2, error exit on overflow (1549) :3 <- :1 times :2 :4 <- #1 if no overflow, else :4 <- #2 (1550) :3 <- :1 divided by :2 :3 <- #0 if :2 is #0 (1900) .1 <- uniform random no. from #0 to #65535 (1910) .2 <- normal random no. from #0 to .1, with standard deviation .1 divided by #12 .cs R .DE .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 2 "Automagical Inclusion Of The Subroutine Library" .P The C-INTERCAL compiler will automatically include the system library if a DO (1xxx) NEXT statement is used, and if no (1xxx) labels are defined anywhere, where (1xxx) is a label in the 1000-1999 range, inclusive. This was not an INTERCAL-72 feature. \} .H 1 "PROGRAMMING HINTS" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "If any one of them can explain it," said Alice, "I'll give him sixpence. \fII\fR don't believe there's an atom of meaning in it." The jury all wrote down, on their slates, "\fIShe\fR doesn't believe there's an atom of meaning in it," but none of them attempted to explain the paper. .P "If there's no meaning in it," said the King, "that saves a world of trouble, you know, as we needn't try to find any. And yet, I don't know," he went on, spreading out the verses on one knee, and looking at them with one eye: "I seem to see some meaning in them, after all...." .DE \} .SETR proghints .P For the user looking to become more familiar with the INTERCAL language, we present in this section an analysis of a complex program, as well as some suggested projects for the ambitious programmer. .P Considering the effort involved in writing an INTERCAL program, it was decided in putting together this manual to use an already existing program for instructive analysis. Since there was only one such program available, we have proceeded to use it. It is known as the "INTERCAL System Library." .H 2 "Description" .P .\" CORRECTION: .\" "is in section {section}" was "on the second page following" .\" We can't rely on the page breaks any more. The program listing is in section .GETHN syslib \&. It is in the same format as would be produced by the Princeton INTERCAL compiler in FORMAT mode with WIDTH=62 (see section .GETHN princeton ). For a description of the functions performed by the Library, see section .GETHN functions \&. .H 2 "Analysis" .P We shall not attempt to discuss here the algorithms used, but rather we shall point out some of the general techniques applicable to a wide range of problems. .P Statements 10, 14, 15, and 26 make up a virtual "computed GO TO". When statement 10 is executed, control passes eventually to statement 16 or 11, depending on whether .5 contains #1 or #2, respectively. The value of .5 is determined in statement 9, which demonstrates another handy technique. To turn an expression, exp, with value #0 or #1, into #1 or #2 (for use in a "GO TO"), use "\*(vb'exp'\*(ct#1"~#3. To reverse the condition (i.e., convert #0 to #2 and leave #1 alone) use "\*(vb'exp'\*(ct#2"~#3. .P Certain conditions are easily checked. For example, to test for zero, select the value from itself and select the bottom bit (see statement 54). To test for all bits being 1's, select the value from itself and select the top bit. .\" CORRECTION: .\" "statements 219 and 220" were "statement 192 and 193", but there .\" is no such test there. .\" Also, last sentence had parenthetical "(see statement 261)". Not .\" only does 261 contain no such test, the library as a whole doesn't .\" seem to either. The test for greater than, performed in statements 219 and 220 on 32-bit values, employs binary logical operations, which are performed as follows: .DS \&'\*(vb.1\*(ct.2'~'#0\*(ct#65535' .DE for 16-bit values or, for 32-bit values: .DS L "'\*(vb":1~'#65535\*(ct30'"\*(ct":2~'#65535\*(ct#0'"'~'#0 \*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'\*(vb":1~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct":2~'#0 \*(ct#65535'"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'" .DE (The proofs are left as an exercise to the reader.) .P Testing for greater-than with 16-bit values is somewhat simpler and is done with the pair of statements: .DS L DO .C <- '\*(vb.A\*(ct.B'~'#0\*(ct#65535' DO .C <- '&"'.A~.C'~'"\*(vb'\*(vb.C~.C'\*(ct#32768" ~"#0\*(ct#65535"'"\*(ct".C~.C"'~#1 .DE This sets .C (a dummy variable) to #1 if .A > .B, and #0 otherwise. The expression may be expanded as described above to instead set .C to #1 or #2. .P Note also in statement 220 the occurrence of ~"#65535\*(ct#65535". Although these operations select the entire value, they are not extraneous, as they ensure that the forthcoming \*(vbs will be operating on 32-bit values. .P In several virtual computed GO TOs the DO FORGET #1 (statement 15 in the earlier example) has been omitted, since the next transfer of control would be a DO RESUME #1. By making this a DO RESUME #2 instead, the FORGET may be forgotten. .P In statement 64, note that .2 is STASHed twice by a single statement. This is perfectly legal. .P Lastly, note in statements 243 and 214 respectively, expressions for shifting 16- and 32-bit variables logically one place to the left. Statement 231 demonstrates right-shifting for 32-bit variables. .bp .H 2 "Program Listing" .SETR syslib .DS L .cs R 24 .\" CORRECTION: .\" This is the corrected system library, not the rather buggy original. .\" Can be semi-mechanically generated from the syslib.i file with .\" sed syslib.i -e 1d -e '/\$/s//\\*(ct/g' -e '/?/s//\\*(vb/g' | nl | expand \" but you have to .\" (a) restore the splat on line 13 DOUBLE OR SINGLE PRECISION OVERFLOW .\" (b) restore the splat on line 254 PLEASE NOTE .... .\" (c) appropriately conditionalize lines 289-294 .\" (d) manually break lines where they wrap 1 (1000) PLEASE IGNORE .4 2 PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM (1005) 3 (1009) DO STASH .1 + .2 + .5 + .6 4 DO .4 <- #1 5 DO (1004) NEXT 6 (1004) PLEASE FORGET #1 7 DO .3 <- '\*(vb.1\*(ct.2'~'#0\*(ct#65535' 8 DO .6 <- '&.1\*(ct.2'~'#0\*(ct#65535' 9 PLEASE DO .5 <- "\*(vb!6~#32768'\*(ct#1"~#3 10 DO (1002) NEXT 11 DO .4 <- #2 12 (1005) DO (1006) NEXT * 13 (1999) DOUBLE OR SINGLE PRECISION OVERFLOW 14 (1002) DO (1001) NEXT 15 (1006) PLEASE FORGET #1 16 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"!6~.6'~#1"\*(ct#1'~#3 17 DO (1003) NEXT 18 DO .1 <- .3 19 DO .2 <- !6\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1' 20 DO (1004) NEXT 21 (1003) DO (1001) NEXT 22 DO REINSTATE (1005) 23 (1007) PLEASE RETRIEVE .1 + .2 + .5 + .6 24 DO REMEMBER .4 25 PLEASE RESUME #2 26 (1001) DO RESUME .5 27 (1010) DO STASH .1 + .2 + .4 28 DO .4 <- .1 29 DO .1 <- '\*(vb.2\*(ct#65535'~'#0\*(ct#65535' 30 DO (1020) NEXT 31 PLEASE DO .2 <- .4 32 PLEASE DO (1009) NEXT 33 DO RETRIEVE .1 + .2 + .4 34 PLEASE RESUME #1 35 (1020) DO STASH .2 + .3 36 DO .2 <- #1 37 PLEASE DO (1021) NEXT 38 (1021) DO FORGET #1 39 DO .3 <- "\*(vb!1~.2'\*(ct#1"~#3 40 PLEASE DO .1 <- '\*(vb.1\*(ct.2'~'#0\*(ct#65535' 41 DO (1022) NEXT 42 DO .2 <- !2\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1' 43 DO (1021) NEXT 44 (1023) PLEASE RESUME .3 45 (1022) DO (1023) NEXT 46 PLEASE RETRIEVE .2 + .3 47 PLEASE RESUME #2 48 (1030) DO ABSTAIN FROM (1033) 49 PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM (1032) 50 (1039) DO STASH :1 + .5 51 DO (1530) NEXT 52 DO .3 <- :1~#65535 53 PLEASE DO .5 <- :1~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 54 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"!5~.5'~#1"\*(ct#1'~#3 55 DO (1031) NEXT 56 (1032) DO (1033) NEXT 57 DO (1999) NEXT 58 (1031) DO (1001) NEXT 59 (1033) DO .4 <- .5 60 DO REINSTATE (1032) 61 PLEASE REINSTATE (1033) 62 DO RETRIEVE :1 + .5 63 PLEASE RESUME #2 64 (1040) PLEASE STASH .1 + .2 + .2 + :1 + :2 + :3 65 DO .2 <- #0 66 DO (1520) NEXT 67 DO STASH :1 68 PLEASE RETRIEVE .2 69 DO .1 <- .2 70 DO .2 <- #0 71 PLEASE DO (1520) NEXT 72 DO :2 <- :1 73 DO RETRIEVE .1 + .2 + :1 74 DO (1550) NEXT 75 PLEASE DO .3 <- :3 76 DO RETRIEVE :1 + :2 + :3 77 DO RESUME #1 78 (1050) PLEASE STASH :2 + :3 + .5 79 DO :2 <- .1 80 PLEASE DO (1550) NEXT 81 DO .5 <- :3~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 82 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"!5~.5'~#1"\*(ct#1'~#3 83 DO (1051) NEXT 84 DO (1999) NEXT 85 (1051) DO (1001) NEXT 86 DO .2 <- :3 87 PLEASE RETRIEVE :2 + :3 + .5 88 DO RESUME #2 89 (1500) PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM (1502) 90 PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM (1506) 91 (1509) PLEASE STASH :1 + .1 + .2 + .3 + .4 + .5 + .6 92 DO .1 <- :1~#65535 93 PLEASE DO .2 <- :2~#65535 94 DO (1009) NEXT 95 DO .5 <- .3 96 PLEASE DO .6 <- .4 97 DO .1 <- :1~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 98 DO .2 <- :2~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 99 DO (1009) NEXT 100 DO .1 <- .3 101 PLEASE DO (1503) NEXT 102 DO .6 <- .4 103 DO .2 <- #1 104 DO (1009) NEXT 105 DO .1 <- .3 106 DO (1501) NEXT 107 (1504) PLEASE RESUME .6 108 (1503) DO (1504) NEXT 109 (1501) DO .2 <- .5 110 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"'&.6\*(ct.4'~#1"\*(ct#2'~#3 111 DO (1505) NEXT 112 (1506) DO (1502) NEXT 113 PLEASE DO (1999) NEXT 114 (1505) DO (1001) NEXT 115 (1502) DO :4 <- .5 116 DO (1520) NEXT 117 DO :3 <- :1 118 PLEASE RETRIEVE :1 + .1 + .2 + .3 + .4 + .5 + .6 119 DO REINSTATE (1502) 120 DO REINSTATE (1506) 121 PLEASE RESUME #3 122 (1510) DO STASH :1 + :2 + :4 123 DO :1 <- "'\*(vb":2~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct#65535' ~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'\*(vb":2~'#0\*(ct#65535' "\*(ct#65535'~'#0\*(ct#65535'" 124 DO :2 <- #1 125 DO (1509) NEXT 126 PLEASE RETRIEVE :1 127 DO :2 <- :3 128 PLEASE DO (1509) NEXT 129 DO RETRIEVE :2 + :4 130 PLEASE RESUME #1 131 (1520) PLEASE STASH .3 + .4 132 DO .3 <- .1~#43690 133 DO (1525) NEXT 134 PLEASE DO .4 <- 'V.3\*(ct".2~#43690"'~'#0\*(ct#65535' 135 DO .3 <- .1~#21845 136 PLEASE DO (1525) NEXT 137 DO :1 <- .4\*(ct"'V.3\*(ct".2~#21845"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'" 138 PLEASE RETRIEVE .3 + .4 139 DO RESUME #1 140 (1525) DO .3 <- '"'"'"!3\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1'"\*(ct#0' ~'#32767\*(ct#1'"\*(ct#0'~'#16383\*(ct#3'"\*(ct#0' ~'#4095\*(ct#15' 141 PLEASE RESUME #1 142 (1530) DO STASH :2 + :3 + .3 + .5 143 DO :1 <- #0 144 DO :2 <- .2 145 DO .3 <- #1 146 DO (1535) NEXT 147 (1535) PLEASE FORGET #1 148 DO .5 <- "\*(vb!1~.3'\*(ct#1"~#3 149 DO (1531) NEXT 150 DO (1500) NEXT 151 DO :1 <- :3 152 PLEASE DO (1533) NEXT 153 (1531) PLEASE DO (1001) NEXT 154 (1533) DO FORGET #1 155 DO .3 <- !3\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1' 156 DO :2 <- ":2~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'":2~'#32767 \*(ct#0'"\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1'" 157 PLEASE DO .5 <- "\*(vb!3~.3'\*(ct#1"~#3 158 DO (1532) NEXT 159 DO (1535) NEXT 160 (1532) DO (1001) NEXT 161 PLEASE RETRIEVE :2 + :3 + .3 + .5 162 DO RESUME #2 163 (1540) PLEASE ABSTAIN FROM (1541) 164 DO ABSTAIN FROM (1542) 165 (1549) PLEASE STASH :1 + :2 + :4 + :5 + .1 + .2 + .5 166 DO .1 <- :1~#65535 167 PLEASE DO .2 <- :2~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 168 DO .5 <- :1~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 169 DO (1530) NEXT 170 DO :3 <- :1 171 DO .2 <- :2~#65535 172 PLEASE DO (1530) NEXT 173 DO :5 <- :1 174 DO .1 <- .5 175 DO (1530) NEXT 176 DO :4 <- :1 177 PLEASE DO :1 <- ":3~'#65280\*(ct#65280'" \*(ct":4~'#65280\*(ct#65280'" 178 DO .5 <- ':1~:1'~#1 179 DO .2 <- :2~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 180 DO (1530) NEXT 181 PLEASE DO .5 <- '"':1~:1'~#1"\*(ct.5'~#3 182 DO .1 <- :3~#65535 183 DO .2 <- #0 184 DO (1520) NEXT 185 PLEASE DO :2 <- :1 186 PLEASE DO .1 <- :4~#65535 187 DO (1520) NEXT 188 DO (1509) NEXT 189 DO .5 <- !5\*(ct":4~#3"'~#15 190 DO :1 <- :3 191 DO :2 <- :5 192 DO (1509) NEXT 193 PLEASE DO .5 <- !5\*(ct":4~#3"'~#172 194 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"!5~.5'~#1"\*(ct#1'~#3 195 PLEASE RETRIEVE :4 196 (1541) DO :4 <- .5 197 DO (1543) NEXT 198 (1542) DO (1544) NEXT 199 PLEASE DO (1999) NEXT 200 (1543) DO (1001) NEXT 201 (1544) DO REINSTATE (1541) 202 PLEASE REINSTATE (1542) 203 PLEASE RETRIEVE :1 + :2 + :5 + .1 + .2 + .5 204 DO RESUME #2 205 (1550) DO STASH :1 + :4 + :5 + .5 206 DO :3 <- #0 207 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"':2~:2'~#1"\*(ct#1'~#3 208 PLEASE DO (1551) NEXT 209 DO :4 <- #1 210 PLEASE DO (1553) NEXT 211 (1553) DO FORGET #1 212 DO .5 <- '\*(vb":2~'#32768\*(ct#0'"\*(ct#2'~#3 213 DO (1552) NEXT 214 DO :2 <- ":2~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'":2~'#32767 \*(ct#0'"\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1'" 215 PLEASE DO :4 <- ":4~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'":4 ~'#32767\*(ct#0'"\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1'" 216 DO (1553) NEXT 217 (1552) DO (1001) NEXT 218 (1556) PLEASE FORGET #1 219 DO :5 <- "'\*(vb":1~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct":2 ~'#65535\*(ct#0'"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"' \*(vb":1~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct":2~'#0\*(ct #65535'"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'" 220 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"'&"':2~:5'~'"'\*(vb"'\*(vb":5~:5 "~"#65535\*(ct#65535"'~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct #32768'~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'\*(vb":5~:5" ~"#65535\*(ct#65535"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'"'"\*(ct"' :5~:5'~#1"'~#1"\*(ct#2'~#3 221 DO (1554) NEXT 222 DO :5 <- :3 223 DO (1510) NEXT 224 PLEASE DO :1 <- :3 225 DO :3 <- "'V":4~'#65535\*(ct#0'"\*(ct":5~'#65535 \*(ct#0'"'~'#0\*(ct#65535'"\*(ct"'V":4~'#0 \*(ct#65535'"\*(ct":5~'#0\*(ct#65535'"'~'#0 \*(ct#65535'" 226 DO (1555) NEXT 227 (1554) PLEASE DO (1001) NEXT 228 (1555) DO FORGET #1 229 DO .5 <- "\*(vb':4~#1'\*(ct#2"~#3 230 DO (1551) NEXT 231 DO :2 <- ":2~'#0\*(ct#65534'"\*(ct":2~'#65535\*(ct#0'" 232 DO :4 <- ":4~'#0\*(ct#65534'"\*(ct":4~'#65535\*(ct#0'" 233 PLEASE DO (1556) NEXT 234 (1551) DO (1001) NEXT 235 PLEASE RETRIEVE :1 + :4 + :5 + .5 236 PLEASE RESUME #2 237 (1900) DO STASH .2 + .3 + .5 238 DO .1 <- #0 239 DO .2 <- #1 240 PLEASE DO (1901) NEXT 241 (1901) DO FORGET #1 242 DO %50 .1 <- 'V.1\*(ct.2'~'#0\*(ct#65535' 243 DO .2 <- !2\*(ct#0'~'#32767\*(ct#1' 244 PLEASE DO .5 <- "\*(vb!2~.2'\*(ct#1"~#3 245 DO (1902) NEXT 246 DO (1901) NEXT 247 (1902) DO (1001) NEXT 248 DO RETRIEVE .2 + .3 + .5 249 PLEASE RESUME #2 250 (1910) PLEASE STASH .1 + .3 + .5 + :1 + :2 + :3 251 DO .3 <- #65524 252 DO :1 <- #6 253 DO (1911) NEXT * 254 PLEASE NOTE THAT YOU CAN'T GET THERE FROM HERE 255 (1912) DO (1001) NEXT 256 (1911) DO FORGET #1 257 PLEASE DO (1900) NEXT 258 DO :2 <- .1 259 DO (1500) NEXT 260 PLEASE DO :1 <- :3 261 DO .1 <- .3 262 DO (1020) NEXT 263 PLEASE DO .3 <- .1 264 DO .5 <- '\*(vb"!3~.3'~#1"\*(ct#2'~#3 265 DO (1912) NEXT 266 DO .1 <- #12 267 PLEASE DO (1050) NEXT 268 DO RETRIEVE .1 269 DO (1530) NEXT 270 DO :2 <- #32768 271 DO (1500) NEXT 272 PLEASE DO .2 <- :3~'#65280\*(ct#65280' 273 PLEASE RETRIEVE .3 + .5 + :1 + :2 + :3 274 DO RESUME #1 .cs R .DE .bp .H 2 "Programming Suggestions" .P For the novice INTERCAL programmer, we provide here a list of suggested INTERCAL programming projects: .P Write an integer exponentiation subroutine. :1 <- .1 raised to the .2 power. .P Write a double-precision sorting subroutine. Given 32-bit array ;1 of size :1, sort the contents into numerically increasing order, leaving the results in ;1. .P Generate a table of prime numbers. .P Put together a floating-point library, using 32-bit variables to represent floating-point numbers (let the upper half be the mantissa and the lower half be the characteristic). The library should be capable of performing floating-point addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, as well as the natural logarithm function. .P Program a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT). This project would probably entail the writing of the floating-point library as well as sine and cosine functions. .P Calculate, to :1 places, the value of pi. .if '\*c'y' \{\ .P (Working programs for each of these projects are included in the C-INTERCAL distribution's pit directory of sample code.) \} .bp .H 1 "ERROR MESSAGES" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F Alice felt dreadfully puzzled. The Hatter's remark seemed to her to have no sort of meaning in it, and yet it was certainly English. "I don't quite understand you," she said, as politely as she could. .DE \} .SETR error_messages .P Due to INTERCAL's implementation of comment lines (see section 4.5), most error messages are produced during execution instead of during compilation. All errors except those not causing immediate termination of program execution are treated as fatal. .H 2 "Format" .P All error messages appear in the following form: .DS L ICLnnnI (error message) ON THE WAY TO STATEMENT nnnn CORRECT SOURCE AND RESUBMIT .DE The message varies depending upon the error involved. For undecodable statements the message is the statement itself. The second line tells which statement would have been executed next had the error not occurred. Note that if the error is due to 80 attempted levels of NEXTing, the statement which would have been executed next need not be anywhere near the statement causing the error. .H 2 "Messages" .P Brief descriptions of the different error types are listed below according to message number. .BL .LI 000 An undecodable statement has been encountered in the course of execution. Note that keypunching errors can be slightly disastrous, since if 'FORGET' were misspelled F-O-R-G-E-R, the results would probably not be those desired. Extreme misspellings may have even more surprising consequences. For example, misspelling 'FORGET' R-E-S-U-M-E could have drastic results. .LI 017 An expression contains a syntax error. .LI 079 Improper use has been made of statement identifiers. .LI 099 Improper use has been made of statement identifiers. .LI 123 Program has attempted 80 levels of NEXTing. .LI 129 Program has attempted to transfer to a non-existent line label. .LI 139 An ABSTAIN or REINSTATE statement references a non-existent line label. .LI 182 A line label has been multiply defined. .LI 197 An invalid line label has been encountered. .LI 200 An expression involves an unidentified variable. .LI 240 An attempt has been made to give an array a dimension of zero. .LI 241 Invalid dimensioning information was supplied in defining or using an array. .LI 275 A 32-bit value has been assigned to a 16-bit variable. .LI 436 A retrieval has been attempted for an unSTASHed value. .LI 533 A WRITE IN statement or interleave (\*(ct) operation has produced a value requiring over 32 bits to represent. .LI 562 Insufficient data. .LI 579 Input data is invalid. .LI 621 The expression of a RESUME statement evaluated to #0. .LI 632 Program execution was terminated via a RESUME statement instead of GIVE UP. .LI 633 Execution has passed beyond the last statement of the program. .LI 774 A compiler error has occurred (see section .GETHN princeton ). .LI 778 .ie '\*c'n' \{\ An unexplainable compiler error has occurred (see J. Lyon or D. Woods)\}. .el An unexplainable compiler error has occurred. .LE .if '\*c'y' \{\ .P The following error codes are new in C-INTERCAL: .BL .LI 111 You tried to use a C-INTERCAL extension with the `traditional' flag on. .LI 127 Can't find syslib.i file when it's needed for magical inclusion. .LI 222 Out of stash space, or attempt to stash an undeclared array. .LI 333 Too many variables. .LI 444 A COME FROM statement references a non-existent line label. .LI 555 More than one COME FROM references the same label. .LI 666 Too many source lines. .LI 777 No such source file. .LI 888 Can't open C output file. .LI 999 Can't open C skeleton file. .LI 998 Source file name with invalid extension (use .i or .[2-7]i). .LI 997 Illegal possession of a controlled unary operator. .LE \} .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 1 "The C-INTERCAL Compiler" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "And yet it was a very clever pudding to invent." .P "What did you mean it to be made of?" Alice asked, hoping to cheer him up, for the poor Knight seemed quite low-spirited about it. .P "It began with blotting-paper," the Knight answered with a groan. .P "That wouldn't be very nice, I'm afraid --" .P "Not very nice \fIalone\fR," he interrupted, quite eagerly, "but you've no idea what a difference it makes, mixing it with other things -- such as gunpowder and sealing-wax." .DE \} .P This section describes the use of ick, the C-INTERCAL compiler. Information specific to the other known INTERCAL compilers appears in the following sections. These sections are less useful, since the other compilers are no longer available, but they are retained to provide a sense of history, and because any information regarding INTERCAL is really too scarce to discard. .H 2 "Character Set" .P The C-INTERCAL compiler uses ASCII rather than EBCDIC. We follow the Atari implementation (see section .GETHN atari ) by (a) replacing the change sign (\*(ct) with big money ($) as the mingle operator, and (b) replacing the bookworm (\*(vb) symbol with what (?) as the XOR operator. .P Version 0.18 and later versions accept the Latin-1 (ISO 8859-1) character set, which is a superset of ASCII. As a result, 0xA2 (\*(ct), 0xA3 (quid), and 0xA4 (zlotnik) are accepted as mingle operators. .P Version 0.20 and later versions also accept UTF-8 as an alternative to Latin-1. The above three currency operators will be accepted in either Latin-1 or UTF-8 format. UTF-8 format is required if you wish to use any of EURO-CURRENCY SIGN, COLON SIGN (that's Costa Rican dinero, not the Intercal two-spot), CRUZEIRO SIGN, FRENCH FRANC SIGN, LIRA SIGN, MILL SIGN, NAIRA SIGN, PESETA SIGN, RUPEE SIGN, WON SIGN, NEW SHEQEL SIGN, DONG SIGN, EURO SIGN, BENGALI RUPEE MARK, BENGALI RUPEE SIGN, or THAI CURRENCY SYMBOL BAHT. (Isn't internationalization wonderful?) Furthermore, you can use the Intercal character FOR ALL to represent the what operator. .H 2 "Usage and Compilation Options" .P To compile an INTERCAL program `foo.i' to executable code, just do ick foo.i There's a -c option that leaves the generated C code in place for inspection (suppressing compilation to machine code), a -d option that enables verbose parse reporting from the yacc/bison parser, a -t option that requires strict INTERCAL-72 compliance (rejecting COME FROM and the extensions for bases other than two), a -b option that disables the INTERCAL-72 random-bug feature (error 774), and an -O option that enables the (hah!) optimizer. Invoking ick -? prints a usage message. .P Another compilation switch affects C-INTERCAL's runtime behavior. The `-C' option forces output in "clockface" mode, for superstitious users who believe writing "IV" upside-down offends IVPITER and would rather see IIII. .H 2 "Runtime Options" .P Every C-INTERCAL runtime also accepts certain options at runtime. These include [+/-]help, [+/-]traditional, and [+/-]wimpmode. The help option (with either + or -) triggers a 'usage' message. The +traditional option is presently a no-op. .P Steve explains: "The wimpmode option is the most interesting. I found myself always running my test programs with filters on both ends to work around the \&'nifty' INTERCAL number representations. This was so painful that I decided it would be \fIless\fR painful (and a lot less code) if I added a 'wimp' option. With the +wimpmode option, the user is subjected to a humiliating message about what a wimp he or she is to use this mode, but after that is allowed to use conventional numerical notation. While such a mode doubtless violates to some extent the INTERCAL philosophy, the fact that an 'unbutcher' command has been posted clearly indicates the need for it. Anyway ... if you don't like it, don't use it ... the default is -wimpmode (i.e. \fInot\fR wimp mode)." .H 2 "PLEASE Politesse Checking" .P A feature of INTERCAL-72 not documented in the original manual was that it required a certain level of politesse from the programmer. If fewer than 1/5th of the program statements included the PLEASE qualifier, the program would be rejected as insufficiently polite. If more than 1/3rd of them included PLEASE, the program would be rejected as excessively polite. .P This check has been implemented in C-INTERCAL. To assist programmers in coping with it, the intercal.el mode included with the distribution randomly expands "do " in entered source to "PLEASE DO" 1/4th of the time. .H 2 "Localization: Ancient Roman" Version 0.18 and later versions of C-Intercal have been localized for Ancient Roman as well as English-speaking locales. This means that Latin-language keywords are accepted as equivalents for the English-based ones traditionally used. See src/lexer.l for details, as we do not propose to break Priscian's head (publicly expose our ignorance of Latin) here. \} .if '\*c'y' \{\ .\" This is the same text as the ATARI NOTES at the end of the manual. .H 1 "The Atari Implementation" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "Perhaps it doesn't understand English," thought Alice. "I daresay it's a French mouse, come over with William the Conqueror." (For, with all her knowledge of history, Alice had no very clear notion how long ago anything had happened.) .DE \} .SETR atari .P The Atari implementation of INTERCAL differs from the original Princeton version primarily in the use of ASCII rather than EBCDIC. Since there is no "change" sign (\*(ct) in ASCII, we have substituted the "big money" ($) as the mingle operator. We feel that this correctly represents the increasing cost of software in relation to hardware. (Consider that in 1970 one could get RUNOFF for free, to run on a $20K machine, whereas today a not quite as powerful formatter costs $99 and runs on a $75 machine.) We also feel that there should be no defensible contention that INTERCAL has any sense. Also, since overpunches are difficult to read on the average VDT, the exclusive-or operator may be written ?. This correctly expresses the average person's reaction on first encountering exclusive-or, especially on a PDP-11. Note that in both of these cases, the over-punched symbol may also be used if one is masochistic, or concerned with portability to the Princeton compiler. The correct over-punch for "change" is "c<backspace>/" and the correct over-punch for \*(vb is "V<backspace>-". These codes will be properly printed if you have a proper printer, and the corresponding EBCDIC code will be produced by the /IBM option on the LIST command. \} .if '\*c'n' \{\ .H 1 "JCL" .SETR princeton .P The information contained in the following section applies only to the Princeton compiler, run under OS/360. .H 2 "The Princeton Compiler" \} .if '\*c'y' \{\ .H 1 "The Princeton Compiler" .DS I F "My name is Alice, so please your Majesty," said Alice very politely; but she added, to herself, "Why, they're only a pack of cards, after all. I needn't be afraid of them!" .DE \} .SETR princeton .P The Princeton compiler, written in SPITBOL (a variant of SNOBOL), performs the compilation in two stages. First the INTERCAL source is converted into SPITBOL source, then the latter is compiled and executed. .P It should be noted that the Princeton compiler fails to properly interpret certain multiply-subscripted expressions, such as: .DS ",1SUB",2SUB#1"#2" .DE .P This is not a "bug". Being documented, it is merely a "restriction". Such cases may be resolved by alternating sparks and ears in various levels of expression nesting: .DS ",1SUB',2SUB#1'#2" .DE which is advisable in any case, since INTERCAL expressions are unreadable enough as is. .P Since there is currently no catalogued procedure for invoking the compiler, the user must include the in-line .\" CORRECTION: .\" "in Figure 3" was "on the following page" procedure shown in Figure 3 in his job before the compilation step. Copies of this in-line procedure may be obtained at any keypunch if the proper keys are struck. .P The compiler is then executed in the usual manner: .DS L // EXEC INTERCAL[,PARM='parameters'] //COMPILE.SYSIN DD * {INTERCAL source deck} /* //EXECUTE.SYSWRITE DD * {input data} /* .DE The various parameters are described following the in-line procedure. At most one parameter from each set may apply to a given compilation; if more than one are specified, the results are undefined, and may vary depending upon the particular set of options. The default parameters are .if n \{\ underlined.\} .if t \{\ italicized.\} .\" CORRECTION: .\" In the original, the footnote was on the wrong line (one above). .DS L //INTERCAL PROC //COMPILE EXEC PGM=INTERCAL //STEPLIB DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.LIBRARY,DISP=SHR // DD DSN=SYS1.FORTLIB,DISP=SHR //SYSPRINT DD SYSOUT=A,DCB=(BLKSIZE=992,LRECL=137,RECFM=VBA) //SYSPUNCH DD DUMMY //SCRATCH DD DSN=&COMPSET,UNIT=SYSDA,SPACE=(CYL,(3,1)),DISP=(,PASS) //EXECUTE EXEC PGM=EXECUTE,COND=(4,LT) //SOURCES DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.SOURCES,DISP=SHR \*F //STEPLIB DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.LIBRARY,DISP=SHR // DD DSN=SYS5.SPITLIB,DISP=SHR // DD DSN=SYS1.FORTLIB,DISP=SHR //SYSIN DD DSN=&COMPSET,DISP=(OLD,DELETE) //SYSOBJ DD SYSOUT=B,DCB=(BLKSIZE=80,LRECL=80,RECFM=F) //SYSPRINT DD SYSOUT=A,DCB=(BLKSIZE=992,LRECL=137,RECFM=VBA) //SYSPUNCH DD DUMMY // PEND .DE .FS Pending acquisition of SPITBOL release 3.0, the SOURCES DD card must be replaced by the five cards: .DS L //NOOPTPFX DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.SOURCES(NOOPTPFX),DISP=SHR //NOOPTSUB DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.SOURCES(NOOPTSUB),DISP=SHR //OPTPFX DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.SOURCES(OPTPFX),DISP=SHR //OPTSUB DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.SOURCES(OPTSUB),DISP=SHR //PRELIM DD DSN=U.INTERCAL.SOURCES(PRELIM),DISP=SHR .DE .FE .ce 1 Figure 3. Inline procedure for using INTERCAL. .P .LB 5 0 " " 0 * 0 0 .LI "\fIOPT\fR" .LI "NOOPT" .LI " " In the default mode, the compiler will print a list of all options in effect, including the defaults for unspecified parameter groups and the effective option for those sets where one was specified. If NOOPT is requested, it causes the default mode to be assumed. .LI "\fIOPTSUB\fR" .LI "NOOPTSUB" .LI "NOSUB" .LI " " Unless 'NOOPTSUB' is requested, the System Library is optimized, resulting in much more rapid processing of function calls. Specifying NOOPTSUB causes the non-optimized INTERCAL code shown in section .GETHN syslib to be used, whereas NOSUB requests that the System Library be omitted altogether. .LI IAMBIC .LI "\fIPROSE\fR" .LI " " The IAMBIC parameter permits the programmer to use poetic license and thus write in verse. If the reader does not believe it possible to write verse in INTERCAL, he should send the authors a stamped, self-addressed envelope, along with any INTERCAL program, and they will provide one which is verse. .LI "\fIFORMAT\fR" .LI NOFORMAT .LI " " In FORMAT mode, each statement printed is put on a separate line (or lines). In NOFORMAT mode, the free-format source is printed exactly as input. In this latter case, statement numbers are provided only for the first statement on a card, and they may be only approximate. Also, unrecognizable statements are not flagged. .LI SEQ .LI "\fINOSEQ\fR" .LI " " If the source deck has sequence numbers in columns 73 through 80, specifying 'SEQ' will cause them to be ignored. .LI "SOURCE" .LI "\fINOSOURCE\fR" .LI " " If NOSOURCE is selected, all source listing is suppressed. .LI LIST .LI "\fINOLIST\fR" .LI " " If LIST is specified, the compiler will provide a list of statement numbers catalogued according to type of statement. The compiler uses this table to perform abstentions by gerund. .LI "WIDTH=nn" .LI " " This sets the width (in number of characters) of the output line for FORMAT mode output. The default is .B 132. .LI "CODE" .LI "\fINOCODE\fR" .LI " " Include 'CODE' in the parameter list to obtain a listing of the SPITBOL code produced for each INTERCAL statement. .LI "LINES=nn" .LI " " This determines the number of lines per page, during both compilation and execution. The default is .B 60. .LI DECK .LI "\fINODECK\fR" .LI " " Selecting 'DECK' will cause the compiler to punch out a SPITBOL object deck which may then be run without reinvoking the INTERCAL (or SPITBOL) compiler. .LI "\fIKIDDING\fR" .LI NOKIDDING .LI " " Select NOKIDDING to eliminate the snide remarks which ordinarily accompany INTERCAL error messages. .LI "\fIGO\fR" .LI NOGO .LI " " Specifying 'NOGO' will cause the program to be compiled but not executed. EXECUTE/NOEXECUTE may be substituted for GO/NOGO, but this will result in an error, and GO will be assumed. .LI "\fIBUG\fR" .LI NOBUG .LI " " Under the default, there is a fixed probability of a fatal compiler bug being worked at random into the program being compiled. Encountering this bug during execution results in error message 774 (see section .GETHN error_messages ). This probability is reduced to zero under 'NOBUG'. This does not affect the probability (presumably negligible) of error message 778. .LE .H 2 "Other INTERCAL Compilers" .P There are no other INTERCAL compilers. \*F .FS This assertion in the INTERCAL-72 manual was blatantly contradicted by some notes on an Atari implementation included at the end of the manual. So, you expect compiler manuals to be consistent? .FE .ds App TONSIL .APP "A\*F" "" .if '\*c'y' \{\ .DS I F "Of course they answer to their names?" the Gnat remarked carelessly. .P "I never knew them to do it." .P "What's the use of their having names," the Gnat said, "if they wo'n't answer to them?" .P "No use to \fIthem\fR," said Alice; "but it's useful to the people that name them, I suppose. If not, why do things have names at all?" .P "I ca'n't say," the Gnat replied. "Further on, in the wood down there, they've got no names -- however, go on with your list...." .DE \} .P The Official INTERCAL Character Set .FS Since all other reference manuals have Appendices, it was decided that the INTERCAL manual should contain some other type of removable organ. .FE .ps \n[@ps] .\".nr * \n*+1 .nr PG \n%+1 .P Tabulated on page \n(PG are all the characters used in INTERCAL, excepting letters and digits, along with their names and interpretations. Also included are several characters not used in INTERCAL, which are presented for completeness and to allow for future expansion. .\" All we're doing here is evaluating \*F and throwing it away .fi \*F .FS This footnote intentionally unreferenced. .FE .ds CH - % - .bp .\".nr * \n*-1 .ps \n[@ps] .ie '\*c'n' \{\ .TS box; c c c l l l. Character Name Use (if any) \&. spot identify 16-bit variable : two-spot identify 32-bit variable , tail identify 16-bit array ; hybrid identify 32-bit array # mesh identify constant \&= half-mesh \' spark grouper ` backspark ! wow equivalent to spark-spot ? what \fIunary exlusive OR (ASCII)\fR " rabbit-ears grouper \o'".' rabbit equivalent to ears-spot | spike % double-oh-seven percentage qualifier \- worm used with angles < angle used with worms > right angle ( wax precedes line label ) wane follows line label [ U turn ] U turn back { embrace } bracelet * splat flags invalid statements & ampersand \*F unary logical AND V V (or book) unary logical OR \*(vb bookworm (or universal qualifier) unary exclusive OR $ big money \fIbinary mingle (ASCII)\fR \*(ct change binary mingle ~ sqiggle binary select \&_ flat worm \*(ov overline indicates "times 1000" + intersection separates list items / slat \e backslat @ whirlpool \*(no hookworm ^ shark (or simply sharkfin) \o"#*\(sq" blotch .if '\*c'y' \{\ \*(de bunghole \*(rg name grabber \*(mu andrew cross \*(di norwegian minus \*(co text grabber \*(sc swash \*(*m microscope \*(+- interworm \*(no half turn 0xA3 quid binary mingle 0xA4 zlotnik binary mingle \} .TE \} .el \{\ .TS box; c c c l l l. Character Name Use (if any) \&. spot identify 16-bit variable : two-spot identify 32-bit variable , tail identify 16-bit array ; hybrid identify 32-bit array # mesh identify constant \&= half-mesh \' spark grouper ` backspark ! wow equivalent to spark-spot ? what unary logical XOR " rabbit-ears grouper \o'".' rabbit equivalent to ears-spot | spike % double-oh-seven percentage qualifier \- worm used with angles < angle used with worms > right angle ( wax precedes line label ) wane follows line label [ U turn ] U turn back { embrace } bracelet * splat flags invalid statements & ampersand \*F unary logical AND V V (or book) unary logical OR \*(vb bookworm (universal qualifier) unary logical XOR (INTERCAL-72) $ big money binary mingle \*(ct change binary mingle (INTERCAL-72) ~ sqiggle binary select \&_ flat worm \*(ov overline indicates "times 1000" + intersection separates list items / slat \e backslat @ whirlpool unary logical BUT (TriINTERCAL) \*(no hookworm ^ shark (or simply sharkfin) unary logical XOR (TriINTERCAL) \o"#*\(sq" blotch .if '\*c'y' \{\ \*(de bunghole \*(rg name grabber \*(mu andrew cross \*(di norwegian minus \*(co text grabber \*(sc swash \*(*m microscope \*(+- interworm \*(no half turn 0xA3 quid binary mingle 0xA4 zlotnik binary mingle \} .TE \} .ce 1 Table 2 (top view). INTERCAL character set. .FS Got any better ideas? .FE .ps \n[@ps] .if '\*c'n' \{\ .APP "B" "NOTES ON THE ATARI IMPLEMENTATION" .P The Atari implementation of INTERCAL differs from the original Princeton .ds CH INTERCAL version primarily in the use of ASCII rather than EBCDIC. Since there is no "change" sign (\*(ct) in ASCII, we have substituted the "big money" ($) as the mingle operator. We feel that this correctly represents the increasing cost of software in relation to hardware. (Consider that in 1970 one could get RUNOFF for free, to run on a $20K machine, whereas today a not quite as powerful formatter costs $99 and runs on a $75 machine.) We also feel that there should be no defensible contention that INTERCAL has any sense. Also, since overpunches are difficult to read on the average VDT, the exclusive-or operator may be written ?. This correctly expresses the average person's reaction on first encountering exclusive-or, especially on a PDP-11. Note that in both of these cases, the over-punched symbol may also be used if one is masochistic, or concerned with portability to the Princeton compiler. The correct over-punch for "change" is "c<backspace>/" and the correct over-punch for \*(vb is "V<backspace>-". These codes will be properly printed if you have a proper printer, and the corresponding EBCDIC code will be produced by the /IBM option on the LIST command. \}