By Bruce W. Arden, Bernard A. Galler, Robert M. Graham
Communications of the ACM,
July 1961,
Vol. 4 No. 7, Pages 310-314
10.1145/366622.366626
Comments
Many algebraic translators provide the programmer with a limited ability to allocate storage. Of course one of the most desirable features of these translators is the extent to which they remove the burden of storage allocation from the programmer. Nevertheless, there are situations in which one wishes to make certain vectors and arrays contiguous, coincident, or overlapping. This is made possible in FORTRAN by the use of COMMON and EQUIVALENCE statements, in MAD by the use of PROGRAM COMMON, ERASABLE, and EQUIVALENCE statements, etc.
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