Template:Short description The Klerer–May System is a programming language developed in the mid-1960s, oriented to numerical scientific programming, whose most notable feature is its two-dimensional syntax based on traditional mathematical notation.

File:Example of a statement in the Klerer-May programming system.png
Example of a statement in the Klerer–May programming language

For input and output, the Klerer–May system used a Friden Flexowriter modified to allow half-line motions for subscripts and superscripts.<ref name="KL65a">Template:Cite journal</ref> The character set included digits, upper-case letters, subsets of 14 lower-case Latin letters and 18 Greek letters, arithmetic operators (+ × / |) and punctuation (. , ( )), and eight special line-drawing characters (resembling _ ˘ ) used to construct multi-line brackets and symbols for summation, products, roots, and for multi-line division or fractions.<ref name="S69">Template:Cite book</ref> The system was intended to be forgiving of input mistakes, and easy to learn; its reference manual was only two pages.<ref name="KL65b">Template:Cite book</ref>

The system was developed by Melvin Klerer and Jack May at Columbia University's Hudson Laboratories in Dobbs Ferry, New York, for the Office of Naval Research, and ran on GE-200 series computers.<ref name="S69" />

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