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ZOG (hypertext)
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==Composition== ZOG consisted of "frames" that contained a title, a description, a line containing ZOG system commands, and selections (menu items) that led to other frames.<ref>{{Citation | format = [[Portable Network Graphics|PNG]] | contribution = Zog form entry | url = http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Zog-form-entry.png | title = The ZOG Technology Demonstration Project: A System Evaluation of the USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70)| date = December 1984 }}.</ref> ZOG pioneered the "frame" or "card" model of hypertext later popularized by [[HyperCard]]. In such systems, the frames or cards cannot scroll to show content that is part of the same document but held offscreen. Instead, text that exceeds the capacity of one screen ''must'' be placed in another (which then constitutes a separate frame or card) The ZOG [[database]] became fully functional around 1977. Beginning in 1980, ZOG was ported from [[VAX|DEC VAX]] version (written in an experimental language called "L*") to the [[Pascal (programming language) | Pascal]]-based [[PERQ|Three Rivers PERQ]] [[workstation]] and was used for a shipwide [[local area network]] on the American [[aircraft carrier]] ''[[USS Carl Vinson]]''. In 1981, Rob Akscyn and Donald McCracken, two principals from the ZOG project, founded Knowledge Systems to develop and market a commercial follow-on to ZOG called [[KMS (hypertext)|KMS]] ("Knowledge Management System").<ref>{{Citation | last1 = Robertson | first1 = CK | first2 = DL | last2 = McCracken | first3 = A | last3 = Newell | title = The ZOG approach to man-machine communication | journal = Interim Report Carnegie-Mellon Univ | type = technical report | id = CMU-CS-79-148 | place = Pittsburgh, PA, US | publisher = Carnegie-Mellon University, Department of Computer Science | year = 1979| bibcode = 1979cmu..rept.....R }}.</ref> ===Syntax=== An example of syntax from one dialect of ZOG:<ref name=mccracken1984></ref> <pre style="display: inline-block;"> This TITLE line summarizes the frame's contents This TEXT expands the frame's main point of information, but is sometimes omitted. The OPTIONS below are used to point to subordinate sections or to provide an enumerated expansion of the main topic. LOCAL PADS do not have the connotation of leading to deeper detail, but rather to tangential points such as related material in another document or database. Invoking programs is another function typically reserved for LOCAL PADS. At the bottom of the frame is a set of general functions called GLOBAL PADS, which are available in every frame. 1. This OPTION leads to another frame 2. Options are often used like subpoints in an outline 3. -This option leads nowhere (indicated by the minus sign at the front) </pre>
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