Yeah but he didn't store the file names in one of the rad50 schemes.
Clem
On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 6:06 PM, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> wrote:
On 2013-06-10 23:39, Paul_Koning at
Dell.com wrote:
On Jun 10, 2013, at 5:20 PM, Jordi Guillaumes i Pons wrote:
El 10/06/2013, a les 23:17, Johnny Billquist <bqt at softjar.se> va escriure:
I think I read somewhere than the inspiration for the CP/M commands was
RT-11, not TOPS-10. But, anyway, the RT-11 commands _are_ inspired by
TOPS-10, which. by the way, sound a little bit like OS/8... :)
I haven't read the article (yet), however I'm pretty sure I've seen in the
past that CP/M was indeed inspired by TOPS-10, and nothing else.
God knows if I can dig up any sources of that, though...
The wikipedia is not a 100% reliable source, but...
"CP/M's command line interface was patterned after the operating systems from
Digital Equipment, such as RT-11 for the PDP-11and OS/8 for the PDP-8."
I don't know OS/8. But pre-DCL RT-11 (for example, V2) had a command language very
similar to that of TOPS-10. For that matter, you can still see it today in the RT11 RTS
that comes with RSTS/E (not surprising because that was written by Anton Chernoff, who
also worked on RT11-FB V2 among other things).
Think pre-DCL RT-11, on a 12-bit architecture, and you have almost every detail of OS/8
pat down. :-)
Johnny