Archive-name: ForthFaq/InPrint
Last-modified: 02.Mar.93
Version: 1.3



  [Note: there are many other entries that could be added here.  I don't
  have the time to type in a bibliography.  Please send me materials that
  you consider worthy of mention.  I would also like to be able to include
  your comments about why a particular selection is worthy.  Remember:
  Some of the readers of this message do not know the "big names", either
  as regards book titles or authors.
  -dwp]



Where can I find "Threaded Interpreted Languages"?

      General consensus seems to be that this book is out of print, but
      sometimes available from booksellers or used book places.  

      G.LEFAVE [Gene] (on GEnie) provides this bibliographic info:
 
 Threaded Interpretive Languages
  R.G. Loeliger

 BYTE BOOKS, 1981, ISBN:0-07-038360-X




Write Your Own Programming Language Using C++

 Norman E. Smith, CDP -- smithn@orvb.saic.com
 provides this info:

 "Write Your Own Programming Language Using C++", by Norman Smith,
 ISBN 1-55622-264-5,
 published by Wordware Publishing, Plano, Texas,
 1-800-229-4949, $15.

 This book presents a minimal Forth implementation called Until, for
 UNconventional Threaded Interpretive Language.  Until is designed
 to be used as a macro language embedded in other applications.  It
 can both call and be called by other C functions.




Scientific FORTH: a modern language for scientific computing

 Julian V. Noble -- jvn@fermi.clas.Virginia.EDU
 provides this info:

 The book "Scientific FORTH: a modern language for scientific
 computing" by Julian V. Noble (ISBN 0-9632775-0-2) is
 available from FIG in the USA, as well as directly from the
 publisher,

      Mechum Banks Publishing
      P.O. Box 335
      Ivy, Virginia 22945
      USA

 for $49.95 + $3.00 s/h (continental USA).

 In Europe it may be purchased from 

      MicroProcessor Engineering, Ltd
      133 Hill Lane
      Shirley, Southampton SO1 5AF
      United Kingdom
      fax 44 703 339691

 While not intended for the Forth novice, Scientific FORTH
 contains a good many serious examples of Forth programming
 style, useful programs, as well as innovations intended to
 simplify number crunching in Forth.  It can now be found in
 the libraries of several major universities (Yale, U. of Chi-
 cago, Rockefeller U., e.g.) and government and industrial
 laboratories ( Fermilab, Motorola, e.g.).  It comes with a
 disk containing all the pro- grams discussed in the book.  An
 update file has recently been posted to GEnie/FIG.
---
If you have any questions about ForthNet/comp.lang.forth or any information
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presentation, please contact Doug Philips at one of the following addresses:
    Internet: dwp@willett.pgh.pa.us
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    GEnie:    D.PHILIPS3
