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Program Composition Notation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Program Composition Notation (PCN) is a specification notation for building up larger programs from smaller modules or programs (usually written in C or Fortran). Efficient parallel programming is at the heart of PCN. Larger composed programs are intended to execute efficiently on single-processor machines, multiprocessors with shared memory or distributed multicomputers.
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (May 2019) |
PCN was developed at Argonne National Laboratory and the California Institute of Technology.
PCN includes the language for specifying concurrent algorithms and interfaces to C and Fortran. There is also a PCN toolkit for workstations that allows applications to be developed for supercomputers which includes debugging and performance analysis tools.
PCN is appropriate for applications benefiting from parallel computing such as fluid dynamics, and climate modelling.
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Sources
- Chandy, K. Mani and Taylor, Stephen (1990), A Primer for Program Composition Notation. Technical Report. California Institute of Technology. [CaltechCSTR:1990.cs-tr-90-10]
- Foster, Ian; Taylor, Stephen (May 1994). "A Compiler Approach to Scalable Concurrent-Program Design". ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems. 16 (3). doi:10.1145/177492.177612.
- Foster, Ian (May 1994). Strand and PCN: Two Generations of Composition Programming Languages (PDF) (Technical report). Rice University.
- PCN article in the Free Online Dictionary of Computing
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