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Bart <bc@freeuk.com> writes:That doesn't explain why one language requires an explcition dereference in the source code, and the other doesn't.
BLISS is a rather strange language. For something supposedly low level thanNot always. This is where left- and right-evaluation came in. On the
C, it doesn't have 'goto'.
>
It is also typeless.
>
There is also a key feature that sets it apart from most HLLs: usually if
you declare a variable A, then you can access A's value just by writing A;
its address is automatically dereferenced.
left of an assignment A denotes a "place" to receive a value. On the
right, it denotes a value obtained from a place. CPL used the terms and
C got them via BCPL's documentation. Viewed like this, BLISS just makes
"evaluation" a universal concept.
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