Inventors BASIC -
(Beginner's All Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code)
By Mary
Bellis
BASIC (standing for
Beginner's All Purpose Symbolic
Instruction Code) was written (invented) in 1963, at
Dartmouth College, by mathematicians John George Kemeny and Tom
Kurtzas as a teaching tool for undergraduates. BASIC has been one of
the most commonly used computer programming languages, a simple
computer language considered an easy step for students to learn
before more powerful languages such as FORTRAN.
BASIC's popularity was spread by
both Paul Allen and William Gates, in 1975. Gates and Allen (both
Microsoft founding fathers) wrote a version of BASIC for the Altair
personal computer. It was the first product Microsoft sold. Later
Gates and Microsoft wrote versions of BASIC for the Apple
computer, and IBM's
DOS which Gates provided came with its' version of
BASIC.
Development
of BASIC A brief history of BASIC.
Beginner's
All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code (BASIC)
Longer, more detailed history
of BASIC.
All
BASIC Code Archives For those of you wishing to program in
BASIC.
Computer
Language General background information on computer
languages.
The
History of Programming Timeline of programming
history.
Related
Information More
Software History Computers
History
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