GEM had nothing to do with PDP-11's. It started out life on VMS (without the
"Open").
-Steve
PS: My wife was one of the Engineers on the GEM project.
________________________________
From: owner-hecnet at Update.UU.SE on behalf of Clem Cole
Sent: Tue 1/15/2013 11:57
To: hecnet at update.uu.se
Subject: Re: [HECnet] Benchmarks - WHETSTONE.C
On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 11:50 AM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
The PDP-11 C compiler is a much later product than any of the stuff you talk about here.
It's something DEC did in the 90s.
Fair enough - long after I was paying much attention. Do you know if it was part of GEM?
The GEM suite allowed N front ends, and Y back-ends.
As for PL/1 on 16 bit machines - it was done, particularly with subset compilers.
Again, I lost interest in it in the early 1980s. PL/C was Cornell's version and a
number of things like Intel's PL/M for the 8080 appeared, Stanfords PL/360 etc, all
show it possible,
The question really was the desire and how far you wanted to go.
Clem