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KRL (programming language)
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{{distinguish|Kinetic Rule Language|KUKA Robot Language}} {{Infobox programming language | name = KRL | paradigm = [[knowledge representation]] | generation = | year = 1976 | designer = | developer = Daniel G. Bobrow and Terry Winograd | latest release version = | latest release date = | turing-complete = | typing = | implementations = | dialects = | influenced by = | influenced = KM, FRL (MIT) }} '''KRL''' is a [[knowledge representation]] [[programming language|language]], developed by [[Daniel G. Bobrow]] and [[Terry Winograd]] while at [[Xerox PARC]] and [[Stanford University]], respectively. It is a [[semantic frames|frame]]-based language. <blockquote> KRL was an attempt to produce a language which was nice to read and write for the engineers who had to write programs in it, processed like human memory, so you could have realistic AI programs, had an underlying semantics which was firmly grounded like logic languages, all in one, all in one language. And I think it - again, in hindsight - it just bogged down under the weight of trying to satisfy all those things at once. <ref>[http://purl.umn.edu/107717 Oral history interview with Terry Winograd] at [[Charles Babbage Institute]], University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.</ref> </blockquote>
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