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==== LANPAR spreadsheet compiler ==== A key invention in the development of electronic spreadsheets was made by Rene K. Pardo and Remy Landau, who filed in 1970 {{US patent|4398249}} on a spreadsheet automatic natural order calculation [[algorithm]]. While the patent was initially rejected by the patent office as being a purely mathematical invention, following 12 years of appeals, Pardo and Landau won a landmark court case at the Predecessor Court of the Federal Circuit (CCPA), overturning the Patent Office in 1983 β establishing that "something does not cease to become patentable merely because the point of novelty is in an algorithm." However, in 1995 a federal district court ruled the patent unenforceable due to inequitable conduct by the inventors during the application process.<ref>{{cite court |litigants=Refac International, Ltd. v. Lotus Development Corp. |vol=887 |reporter=F. Supp. |opinion=539 |court=[[United States District Court for the Southern District of New York|S.D.N.Y.]] |date=1995-04-18 |url=https://casetext.com/case/refac-international-ltd-v-lotus-development-corporation}}</ref> The [[United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit]] upheld that decision in 1996.<ref>{{cite court |litigants=Refac International, Ltd. v. Lotus Development Corp. |vol=81 |reporter=F.3d |opinion=1576 |court=Fed. Cir. |date=1996-04-26 |url=https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/us-federal-circuit/1339862.html}}</ref> The actual software was called LANPAR β LANguage for Programming Arrays at Random.{{NoteTag|This may be a [[backronym]], as "LANPAR is also a [[portmanteau]] of the developers' surnames, "''Lan''dau" and "''Par''do".}} This was conceived and entirely developed in the summer of 1969, following Pardo and Landau's recent graduation from Harvard University. Co-inventor Rene Pardo recalls that he felt that one manager at Bell Canada should not have to depend on programmers to program and modify budgeting forms, and he thought of letting users type out forms in any order and having an electronic computer calculate results in the right order ("Forward Referencing/Natural Order Calculation"). Pardo and Landau developed and implemented the software in 1969.<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.renepardo.com |title = Rene Pardo β Personal Web Page |website = renepardo.com }}</ref> LANPAR was used by Bell Canada, AT&T, and the 18 operating telephone companies nationwide for their local and national budgeting operations. LANPAR was also used by General Motors. Its uniqueness was Pardo's co-invention incorporating forward referencing/natural order calculation (one of the first "non-procedural" computer languages)<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.renepardo.com/articles/spreadsheet.pdf |title=The World's First Electronic Spreadsheet |website=Rene Pardo |access-date=2007-11-03 |archive-date=2010-08-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100821102116/http://www.renepardo.com/articles/spreadsheet.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> as opposed to left-to-right, top to bottom sequence for calculating the results in each cell that was used by [[VisiCalc]], [[SuperCalc]], and the first version of [[MultiPlan]]. Without forward referencing/natural order calculation, the user had to refresh the spreadsheet until the values in all cells remained unchanged. Once the cell values stayed constant, the user was assured that there were no remaining forward references within the spreadsheet.
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