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CORC
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{{Short description|Programming language}} {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}} '''CORC''' (the Cornell computing language) was a simple [[computer language]] developed at [[Cornell University]] in 1962 to serve lay users, namely for students to use to solve math problems. Its developers, [[industrial engineering]] professors [[Richard W. Conway]] and [[William L. Maxwell]], sought to create a language which could both expose mathematics and engineering students to computing and remove the burden of mechanical problem-solving from their professors. CORC was designed with ease of use in mind. It contained strains of both [[FORTRAN]] and [[ALGOL]] but was much simpler. Since programs were tediously input with [[punched cards]], the [[compiler]] had a high tolerance for error, attempting to bypass or even correct problem sections of code. Students could submit a program by 5 PM which would be compiled or run overnight, with results available the next morning. It was initially run on the [[Burroughs 220]] and later extended to the [[CDC 1604]]. In 1966 it was superseded by [[Cornell University Programming Language|CUPL]], a batch compiler for teaching which ran on the [[IBM System/360]]. An extension of CORC, the '''Cornell List Processor''' (CLP), was a list processing language used for simulation. ==References== *{{Cite journal |last1=Conway |first1=Richard W. |authorlink1=Richard W. Conway |last2=Maxwell |first2=William L. |authorlink2=William L. Maxwell |title=CORCโthe Cornell computing language |journal=[[Communications of the ACM|CACM]] |volume=6 |issue=6 |pages=317–321 |date=June 1963 |doi=10.1145/366604.366651 |doi-access=free }} * David N. Freeman. 1964. "Error correction in CORC: the Cornell Computing Language". In ''Proceedings of the October 27-29, 1964, fall joint computer conference, part I'' (AFIPS '64 (Fall, part I)). Association for Computing Machinery, 15โ34. https://doi.org/10.1145/1464052.1464055 * [https://web.archive.org/web/20090302025733/http://cit.cornell.edu/computer/history/Lesser.html Richard C. Lesser's Recollections: The Cornell Computing Center - the early years, 1953 to 1964]. ==External links== *[http://www.catb.org/~esr/cupl/ Resource page for cupl 1.6], providing binary and source code and background information about CUPL and CORC. [[Category:Procedural programming languages]] [[Category:Cornell University]] [[Category:Programming languages created in 1962]]
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