In einer eMail vom 8/9/100 3:17:33AM, schreiben Sie:
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I've used it since the early '80's but my work has hovered over the low-end
capabilities of the language. Now that it's obsolete, I'm trying to make up
for all the stuff I didn't learn when it was mainstream. I've had people
tell me about features I've never even read about, and there are plenty of
them that I haven't used and HAVE read about. It's pretty simple if not
compact, to do everything with logic equations, and that's what I've always
done. Now I'm trying to catch up on the built-in state-machine dialects.
They use several constructs which have carried forward, somewhat, into
Verilog and VHDL, but not in the same way or with the same syntax as PALASM.
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It occured to me that the quite modern and today mainstream language Abel
has somewhat similar constructs, and is part of most modern electronic CAD
systems. While having retained quite some similarity with PALASM, it may be
closer to today's tools like VHDL.
Regards
John G. Zabolitzky