IMP | |
Paradigms: | Multi-paradigm |
Family: | ALGOL |
Designer: | Edgar T. Irons |
Developer: | National Security Agency |
Df: | yes --> |
Latest Release Version: | IMP72 |
Df: | yes --> |
Typing: | Static, strong |
Scope: | Lexical |
Programming Language: | ALGOL 60 |
Platform: | CDC 6600, Cray, PDP-10, PDP-11 |
Operating System: | COS, SCOPE, TOPS-10, Unix, others |
License: | Proprietary |
File Formats: | --> |
Implementations: | IMP65, IMP70, IMP72 |
Influenced By: | ALGOL 60 |
IMP is an early systems programming language that was developed by Edgar T. Irons in the late 1960s through early 1970s, at the National Security Agency (NSA). Unlike most other systems languages, IMP supports syntax-extensible programming.
Even though, IMP excludes many defining features of that language, while supporting a very non-ALGOL-like one: syntax extensibility.
A compiler for IMP existed as early as 1965 and was used to program the CDC 6600 time-sharing system, which was in use at the Institute for Defense Analyses since 1967. Although the compiler is slower than comparable ones for non-extensible languages, it has been used for practical production work.
IMP compilers were developed for the CDC 6600, Cray, PDP-10 and PDP-11 computers. Important IMP versions were IMP65, IMP70, and IMP72.
Being an extensible syntax programming language, IMP allows a programmer to extend its syntax, although no specific means are provided to add new data types or structures to it. To achieve its syntax-extensibility, IMP uses a powerful parse algorithm based on a syntax graph and several connectivity matrices. The programmer may add new Backus–Naur form (BNF) productions to the graph.
IMP72's syntax is extended by means of extended-BNF syntax statements included in a source code program. The mechanism is so powerful, that it allowed the implementation of the language by itself, i.e., by an IMP72 source file consisting entirely of syntax statements, which was input to a trivial compiler which was initially able to translate the simplest case of the syntax statement. There is also a simple form of the syntax statement which looks like a macro to the casual user.
Basically, the syntax statement is an augmented BNF production with associated semantics added on the right:INCREMENT V
should translate to V ← V + 1
, the programmer would only need to insert the following IMP statement:DEWOP
. The arguments are the octal constant 214B
, the semantic routine call AREG1(1,13)
, and A
, which is the object on top of the stack at the moment this production is invoked. DEWOP
is a semantic routine which respectively takes as its arguments a PDP-10 machine language opcode, a register object, and any other object, and produces an object whose value is the result of executing the designated machine instruction using as address field the object which is its last argument. In this example, the opcode 214B
designates the Load Magnitude
instruction, and thus the result of the above syntax statement will be to compile code to compute the absolute value of A
.
IMP was the language used on NSA's homegrown time-sharing operating system named Folklore.[1]