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PALASM

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
PALASM design of a 4-bit counter

PALASM is an early hardware description language, used to translate Boolean functions and state transition tables into a fuse map for use with Programmable Array Logic (PAL) devices introduced by Monolithic Memories, Inc. (MMI). The language was developed by John Birkner in the early 1980s. It is not case-sensitive.

The PALASM compiler was written by MMI in FORTRAN IV on an IBM 370/168. MMI made the source code available to users at no cost. By 1983, MMI customers ran versions on the DEC PDP-11, Data General NOVA, Hewlett-Packard HP 2100, MDS800 and others. A widely used MS-DOS port was produced by MMI.[1] There was a Windows front-end written sometime later.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "DOS Version including manuals and executables".
  2. ^ Alin Badea; Lorand Bogdanffy. "HDL Windows Designer Compatible with the PALASM Platform" (PDF).
  • [1] PALASM 4 V1.5 download
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