Early query language, ca. 1965, System Development Corp,
Santa Monica, CA. [Sammet 1969, p.701].
A family of dataflow languages descended from
ISWIM,
lazy but
first-order.
Ashcroft & Wadge <wwadge@csr.uvic.ca>, 1981.
They use a dynamic
demand driven model. Statements are
regarded as equations defining a network of processors and
communication lines, through which the data flows. Every data
object is thought of as an infinite
stream of simple values,
every function as a
filter. Lucid has no data constructors such as arrays or
records.
Iteration is
simulated with 'is current' and 'fby' (concatenation of
sequences). Higher-order functions are implemented using pure
dataflow and no closures or heaps.
["Lucid: The Dataflow Language" by Bill Wadge
<wwadge@csr.UVic.CA> and Ed Ashcroft, c. 1985]. ["Lucid, the
Dataflow Programming Language", W. Wadge, Academic Press
1985].