True BASIC

True BASIC is a variant of the BASIC programming language descended from Dartmouth BASIC—the original BASIC. Both were created by college professors John G. Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz.[1]

True BASIC
Designed byJohn G. Kemeny
Thomas E. Kurtz
DeveloperTrue BASIC, Inc.
First appeared1983; 41 years ago (1983)
Websitewww.truebasic.com
Influenced by
BASIC

History

True BASIC traces its history to an offshoot of Dartmouth BASIC called Structured BASIC, or SBASIC for short. This was released sometime in 1975 or 1976, but was not installed as the mainline version of BASIC on the Dartmouth Time Sharing System (DTSS) that supported the campus. Shortly after, Kemeny became involved in an effort to produce an ANSI standard BASIC in an attempt to bring together the many small variations of the language that had developed through the late 1960s and early 1970s. This effort initially focused on a system known as Minimal BASIC that was similar to earliest versions of Dartmouth BASIC, while later work was aimed at a Full BASIC that was essentially SBASIC with various extensions.

By the early 1980s, tens of millions of home computers were running some variation of Microsoft BASIC, which had become the de facto standard. The ANSI efforts eventually became pointless, as it became clear that these versions were not going to have any market impact in a world dominated by MS. Both versions were eventually ratified but saw little or no adoption and the standards were later withdrawn. Kemeny and Kurtz, however, decided to continue their efforts to introduce the concepts from SBASIC and the ANSI Standard BASIC efforts. This became True BASIC.

Initially based on Dartmouth BASIC 7, True BASIC was introduced in 1985. There are versions of the True BASIC compiler for MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, and Classic Mac OS. At one time, versions for TRS-80 Color Computer, Amiga and Atari ST computers were offered, as well as a UNIX command-line compiler.

Features

Being a structured programming implementation of the language, it dispenses with the need for line numbers and GOTO statements, although these can still be used.

True BASIC provides statements for matrix arithmetic, a feature that had been present in Dartmouth BASIC since early times, but had been dropped in almost all microcomputer versions of BASIC interpreters. It implements global and local variables which make it possible to write recursive functions and subroutines.

The designers wanted to make the language hardware-independent, so True BASIC source code would run equally well on any version of their compiler.[citation needed] For the most part, they succeed in this endeavor. The drawback for users was that direct access to some features of their machines was not available, but this could be remedied with callable functions and subroutines specially written in assembly language.

Using newer versions of True BASIC, some of the older functions are blocked out. An example of the recent code would be more like this:

RANDOMIZESET WINDOW 0,20,0,20SET COLOR 5 !Set the pen and text colour to 5 as true basic has 0-15 coloursPRINT "Welcome To ..." !Print "Welcome To ..." on the user's screen. DO !Begin the loop    LET x=rnd*20 !Let the value 'x' equal a random number between '0' and '20'    LET y=rnd*20 !Let the value 'y' equal a random number between '0' and '20'    Pause .1 !Waits 1/10 of a second    PLOT TEXT, at x, y: "Fabulous Wikipedia!" !Plot 'Fabulous Wikipedia!' at coordinates 'x' and 'y'LOOP !End the loop END !End the program

This simple program plots the text "Welcome To ..." at the top left-hand corner of the screen, and then continues into a never-ending loop plotting "Fabulous Wikipedia!" at random coordinates.

An example of simple animation could be like this:

!Draw the CarSET WINDOW 0,20,0,20SET COLOR 5BOX AREA 2,6,2,3BOX AREA 9,13,2,3BOX AREA 16,20,2,3SET COLOR 249PLOT LINES :0,5;20,5FLOOD 10,1BOX KEEP 0,20,0,5 IN road$BOX CIRCLE 2,3,5,6FLOOD 2.5,5.5BOX CIRCLE 5,6,5,6FLOOD 5.5,5.5SET COLOR 35PLOT LINES :2.5,6;5.5,6PLOT LINES :5,6;8,6;8,8;6,8;6,10;2,10;2,8;0,8;0,6;3,6FLOOD 4,8SET COLOR 248BOX AREA 4,5,8,9 BOX KEEP 0,8,5,10 IN car$ !Save the car in 'car$'  FOR x=1 TO 20 STEP 1 !Create a 'for' loop    BOX SHOW road$ AT 0,0    BOX SHOW car$ AT x,5      PAUSE .1    CLEARNEXT x !End the 'for' loop END !End the programs

Reception

Jerry Pournelle in 1985 asked, "why do we need True BASIC at all? [It] doesn't seem to do anything regular BASIC doesn't do, and what it does do isn't attacked in a logical or intuitive manner." He criticized the lack of output when encountering an error, preventing interactive debugging by "inserting print statements as diagnostics". Pournelle concluded, "I think I'll pass up the opportunity to become a born-again True BASIC believer. I'll enjoy my Microsoft and CBASIC heresies."[2]

Some users have complained about their programs and the editor using up 100% of their CPU (or core).[3][4][5][6] This appears to be caused by the editor and user's programs using a loop which constantly polls the keyboard and mouse for events. The problem has been known since at least the end of 2010,[3] yet as of early 2014 is still being worked on.[6]

Further reading

  • Kemeny, John G.; Kurtz, Thomas E. (1985). Back To BASIC: The History, Corruption, and Future of the Language. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc. 141 pp. ISBN 0-201-13433-0.

References

External links