Basic

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BASIC, an acronym for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code, is a family of high-level programming languages, initially designed in 1963/1964 by John G. Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz at Dartmouth College.

While early dialects worked in conjunction with a teletype command line interpreter, which could immediately interprete and print expressions, or run a program which lines were entered (or re-loaded from punch tape) with leading line numbers, later dialects were more sophisticated with respect to program structure, recursion, object-oriented and event-driven programming paradigms, and compiled executables. =Basic Engines= There were a few didactic chess programs written in Basic, most notably a program by Dieter Steinwender published 1984 in Computerschach und Spiele, Demoschach by Hans-Joachim Kraas and Günther Schrüfer , and Minimax by Chrilly Donninger and Dieter Steinwender, which was later converted to WinBoard by Thomas McBurney.
 * Engines written in Basic

=Publications=
 * Michael McCann (1979). Basic Chess. Personal Computing, Vol. 3, No. 12, pp. 48
 * Craig A. Finseth (1980). Something is Missing (Implementing recursion and stacks in BASIC). The Best of Creative Computing Volume 3 » Recursion, Stack
 * Rainer Bartel, Hans-Joachim Kraas, Günther Schrüfer (1985). Das große Computerschachbuch. Data Becker (German) from amazon.de

=Forum Posts=
 * Chess in BASIC? by William H. Rogers, CCC, August 28, 1998 » Point Value
 * qBASIC Chess program - from 1984 by Dieter Steinwender by Mike Byrne, CCC, February 23, 2003
 * Old chess program in BASIC (long post) by Walter Faxon, CCC, March 20, 2005
 * GUI in Visual Basic by Edmund Moshammer, CCC, February 28, 2009 » GUI

=External Links=

Wikipedia

 * BASIC
 * List of BASIC dialects
 * Altair BASIC
 * Applesoft BASIC
 * Atom Basic » Acorn Atom
 * Basic4ppc
 * BBC BASIC » BBC Micro
 * Commodore BASIC
 * Dartmouth BASIC
 * FreeBASIC
 * FutureBASIC
 * GFA BASIC
 * GLBasic
 * GW-BASIC
 * HP BASIC
 * HP time-shared BASIC


 * Locomotive BASIC
 * Microsoft BASIC
 * NS Basic
 * PowerBASIC
 * PureBasic
 * QBasic
 * QuickBASIC
 * Sinclair BASIC
 * Tiny BASIC
 * Turbo Basic
 * Visual Basic
 * VBScript
 * Visual Basic .NET
 * Visual Basic for Applications

Hiarcs

 * HIARCS 3 (0.3) Source code, 1981 from HIARCS: Where It All Began by Mark Uniacke
 * HIARCS 5 (0.5) Source code, 1983 from Now Walking by Mark Uniacke

=References=

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