From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rapira (Russian: Рапира, rapier) is an educational procedural programming language developed in the Soviet Union and implemented on the Agat computer, PDP-11 clones (Electronika, DVK, BK series), and Intel 8080 and Zilog Z80 clones (Korvet). It is interpreted with a dynamic type system and high level constructions. The language originally had a Russian-based set of reserved words (keywords), but English and Romanian were added later. It was considered more elegant and easier to use than Pascal implementations of the time.[according to whom?]
Rapira was used to teach computer programming in Soviet schools. The integrated development environment included a text editor and a debugger.
Sample program:
ПРОЦ СТАРТ() ВЫВОД: 'Привет, мир!!!' КОН ПРОЦ
The same, but using the English lexics [sic, from the article referenced below]:
proc start() output: 'Hello, world!!!'; end proc
Rapira's ideology was based on languages such as POP-2 and SETL, with strong influences from ALGOL.
Consequently, for example, Rapira implements a very strong, flexible, and interesting data structure, named a tuple. in Rapira, these are heterogeneous lists with allowed operations such as indexing, joining, length count, getting of sublist, easy comparison, etc.
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