William,

Although I used FORTRAN ages ago and it still seems to be in active use, I am 
not clear on why the name FORMULA TRANSLATOR was chosen. I do agree it does 
sound more like a computer language based on both the sound and feel of FORTRAN 
as well as the expanded version.

It seems to have been designed as a mathematical extension of sorts that 
allowed you to evaluate a mathematical formula efficiently. I mean things like 
quadratic equations. But there is overlap with what other languages like COBOL 
or BASIC did at the time.

What gets me is the vagueness of the words looked at by ME today. Any modern 
computing language can do what standard FORTRAN does, albeit perhaps more 
slowly as I know some languages do some of their math using libraries from 
FORTRAN. But do we use the word TRANSLATOR quite that way much anymore? Heck, 
do we use FORMULA in the same way?

My most recent use of formula has been in the R language where there is a 
distinct object type called a formula that can be used to specify models when 
doing things like a regression on data. I am more likely to call the other kind 
using words like "equation". Python has an add-on that does symbolic 
manipulation. Did FORTRAN have any of these enhanced objects back when created, 
or even now?

As I joked in an earlier message, I remember using a version of FORTRAN called 
WATFOR. Yes, there was a WATFIV. 



-----Original Message-----
From: Python-list <python-list-bounces+avigross=verizon....@python.org> On 
Behalf Of William Ray Wing via Python-list
Sent: Friday, January 4, 2019 11:06 AM
To: Python <python-list@python.org>
Cc: William R. Wing <w...@mac.com>
Subject: Re: the python name

On 3/01/19 2:03 PM, Avi Gross wrote:
> Challenge: Can we name any computer language whose name really would suggest 
> it was a computer language?
> I think the name is the least important aspect of a computer language.

I’d like to propose that classic FORTRAN (FORmulaTRANslator) came/comes close.

Bill
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