By M. J. R. Healy
Communications of the ACM,
December 1964,
Vol. 7 No. 12, Page 735
10.1145/355588.365139
Comments
The very generality of a language like ALGOL renders it inefficient when a number of programs have to be written all dealing with a fairly narrow range of problems. This can be largely overcome by the construction of a package of suitable procedures, each of which embodies a fairly substantial piece of computation that will be required in several different contexts (see, for example [1]). A program for a specific purpose will consist of a set of these procedures linked by a more or less skeletal main program.
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