IIRC, Steven Kaisler's book "The Design of Operating Systems for Small Computer
Systems" used the up-arrow as the pseudocode's pointer symbol. Did Pascal do
that as well, or was that only on some of the Pascal dialects?
Wesley Parish
Quoting Ronald Natalie <ron(a)ronnatalie.com>:
We had teletypes that went both ways. Some had the
arrows and some had
the caret/underscore.
On Jul 12, 2016, at 1:53 PM, Tim Bradshaw
<tfb(a)tfeb.org> wrote:
On 10 Jul 2016, at 02:46, Steve Nickolas <usotsuki(a)buric.co> wrote:
> Some 8-bit computers used up arrow for ^ even into the 80s, I think
Radio
Shack's did at least.
I'm fairly (but not completely) sure that the Xerox Lisp machines had
caret
as up arrow, and they certainly had left arrow for underscore.
They persisted into the late 80s when I used them. I'm not sure what
appeared on the keyboards, which may have been more modern than the
character set used by the system, since the same hardware was sold with
different software on it.
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