NBS Minimal BASIC Test Programs: Version 2, User's Manual, Issue 500, Part 1 - Issue 570, Part 1U.S. Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards, 1980 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 22
Page 1
... programs can determine whether or not a given feature is correctly implemented , others produce output which the user must then interpret to some degree . This manual describes how the programs used SO as to interpret correctly the ...
... programs can determine whether or not a given feature is correctly implemented , others produce output which the user must then interpret to some degree . This manual describes how the programs used SO as to interpret correctly the ...
Page 5
... Programs .. Appendix A : Differences between Versions 1 and 2 of the Minimal BASIC Test Programs . References . Figures : Figure 1 - Error and Exception Handling . Figure 2 - Format of Test Program Output .... 71 • 75 76 14 • 25 Figure ...
... Programs .. Appendix A : Differences between Versions 1 and 2 of the Minimal BASIC Test Programs . References . Figures : Figure 1 - Error and Exception Handling . Figure 2 - Format of Test Program Output .... 71 • 75 76 14 • 25 Figure ...
Page 8
... program , a GOSUB and RETURN for internal subroutines , a FOR and NEXT statement to execute loops while incrementing a control - variable , and a STOP statement . Input and output are accomplished with the INPUT and PRINT statements ...
... program , a GOSUB and RETURN for internal subroutines , a FOR and NEXT statement to execute loops while incrementing a control - variable , and a STOP statement . Input and output are accomplished with the INPUT and PRINT statements ...
Page 9
... program . one area Although the ... program portability . The same program should not evoke perniciously different behavior in different implementations . Ideally , the same source code and data environment should produce the same output ...
... program . one area Although the ... program portability . The same program should not evoke perniciously different behavior in different implementations . Ideally , the same source code and data environment should produce the same output ...
Page 16
... programs do require input , however , and these present more of a problem , since the input needed often depends on the immediately preceding output of the program . See the sample output in Volume 2 for help in setting up data files if ...
... programs do require input , however , and these present more of a problem , since the input needed often depends on the immediately preceding output of the program . See the sample output in Volume 2 for help in setting up data files if ...
Common terms and phrases
72 characters 8.4 PROGRAM NUMBER algorithm allowed ANSI ANSI standard argument assignment BASIC Test Programs behavior Computer Science context Control Statements correctly DEF statement division by zero documentation endif error measure error programs ERROR REFS error tests EVALUATION OF NUMERIC Exception Handling EXCEPTION REFS exception report exception tests execution FOR-BLOCKS FOR-STATEMENT functional group GOSUB and RETURN GOTO Implementation Conformance implementation-defined features Informative Tests INPUT exception input-reply internal interpretation keyword language standard LINE-NUMBERS machine infinity Minimal BASIC Test non-fatal exceptions NUMERIC CONSTANTS NUMERIC EXPRESSIONS ON-GOTO operations OPTION BASE pass/fail message passes or fails PBASIC PRINT processor FAILS PROGRAM NUMBER EXCEPTION program output programming language programs test pseudorandom QUOTED STRINGS CONTAINING recovery procedure reply requirements RND FUNCTION rules Science and Technology self-checking semantic significand simple software testing source code specified Standard Capabilities standard program syntax test fails TEST PASSED test system UNDERFLOW USER-DEFINED FUNCTION Version ZERO