De LTR (Langage Temps Réel) à LTR1, LTR2, LTR3
Ce courriel de Christophe Prazuck nous en appris plus sur LTR, langage sur lequel Jean-Raymond Abrial a travaillé au CPM à Paris.
on which Jean-Raymond Abrial worked at the CPM in Paris.
Dear Sir,
To answer your questions, I interviewed Admiral Edouard Guillaud,
former Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces and a passionate player in the
Naval Programming Centre (CPM) He writes "There were at least two versions
of LTR used (LTR1 which was a transcription of the US version, then LTR 2,
French and more powerful) and one in gestation (LTR3) at the time of the
development of ADA. At the time, CPM was also interested in recent languages
such as C, C+ and C++, due to the disruptions brought about by modern chips.
I think that the answers would be complete if they were asked to an armaments
engineer working at the CPM of the great era. In particular to the Chief
Armament Engineer (ICA) Pascal Grojean, a remarkable visionary specialist. «
https://www.onera.fr/sites/default/files/u490/mastere_ems_lecture.pdf
"The first notable embedded real-time system was the Apollo Guidance Computer,
onboard computation for guidance, navigation, and control of the spacecraft of the
Apollo program. It has been developed by Charles Stark Draper of Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
• First computer to use integrated circuits
• Used in real-time by the astronauts to collect and provide flight data, and to
automatically control the navigation functions of the spacecraft.
• 16-bit wordlength memory : composed of 64 ko (32 000 words) ROM containing all the
programs and of 4 ko (2 042 words) RAM for the computations. The processor weights
around 35 kg. "
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Stark_Draper
https://apollo11space.com/charles-stark-draper-the-man-who-guided-apollo-to-the-moon/
Comments
Post a Comment