BCS FORTRAN
Fortran (previously FORTRAN, derived from Formula Translating System)
is a general-purpose, imperative programming language that is
especially suited to numeric computation and scientific computing.
Originally developed by IBM in the 1950s for scientific and
engineering applications, Fortran came to dominate this area of
programming early on and has been in continuous use for over half a
century in computationally intensive areas such as numerical weather
prediction, finite element analysis, computational fluid dynamics,
computational physics and computational chemistry. It is one of the
most popular languages in the area of high-performance computing and
is the language used for programs that benchmark and rank the world's
fastest supercomputers.
Fortran encompasses a lineage of versions, each of which evolved
to add extensions to the language while usually retaining compatibility
with previous versions. Successive versions have added support for
structured programming and processing of character-based data (FORTRAN
77), array programming, modular programming and generic programming
(Fortran 90), high performance Fortran (Fortran 95), object-oriented
programming (Fortran 2003) and concurrent programming (Fortran 2008).