kac@tc.fluke.COM (Ken Coulson) (10/25/88)
Does anybody have any information on a PLM to C translator? Ken Coulson (206) 356-5276 or 486-6147 kac@tc.fluke.COM {microsoft, sun}!fluke!kac
yuval@taux02.UUCP (Gideon Yuval) (10/25/88)
Microprocessor Services, Inc., 516-499-4461 advertises such a thing. $500 or so (PL/M can be -80,-51 or -86). That's all I know. -- Gideon Yuval, yuval@taux01.nsc.com, +972-2-690992 (home) ,-52-522255(work) Paper-mail: National Semiconductor, 6 Maskit St., Herzliyah, Israel TWX: 33691, fax: +972-52-558322
daveb@gonzo.UUCP (Dave Brower) (10/28/88)
In article <221@taux02.UUCP> yuval@taux02.UUCP (Gideon Yuval) writes: > >Microprocessor Services, Inc., 516-499-4461 advertises such a thing. >$500 or so (PL/M can be -80,-51 or -86). That's all I know. I attended a talk at the West Coast Computer Faire in maybe 1984 about the expeiriences some people at Zilog had porting CP/M to the Z8000. Most of the CP/M utilitites were written in PL/M, and they needed to be translated to C. The question was whether to write a translator program, or do it by hand. They decided to do it by hand, because they felt a literal translation wouldn't catch intent very well. Since it would need to be checked line by line anyway, they thought doing it by hand with the help of sed was a better idea. Of course, for 500 shekels, if it saves you a few days on hand translating by working better than sed, you are still ahead. Your mileage may vary. -dB