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| Cambridge Algebra System | |
|---|---|
| Developer(s) | David Barton, Stephen R. Bourne, and John Fitch |
| Written in | Titan assembler, ALGOL 68C, BCPL |
| Operating system | Titan computer then Cross-platform |
| Type | Computer algebra system |
Cambridge Algebra System (CAMAL) is a computer algebra system written in Cambridge University by David Barton, Steve Bourne, and John Fitch. It was initially used for computations in celestial mechanics[1][2] and general relativity. The foundation code was written in Titan computer assembler.[3][better source needed][4] In 1973, when Titan was replaced with an IBM System/370 Model 165, it was rewritten in ALGOL 68C and then BCPL[5] where it could run on IBM mainframes and assorted microcomputers.[4]
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)