| Developer(s) | Digital Equipment Corporation | 
|---|---|
| Operating system | OS/8, TOPS-10, RSTS/E | 
| Platform | PDP-6, PDP-8, PDP-10, PDP-11 | 
| Successor | DIGITAL Command Language (DCL) | 
| Available in | English | 
| Type | Command shell | 
Concise Command Language (CCL) was the term used by Digital Equipment Corporation for the Command-line interpreter / User interface supplied on several of their computing systems; its successor was named DIGITAL Command Language (DCL).
CCL provides the user with an extensive set of terminal commands.[1]
History
The PDP-6 monitor came with a simple set of commands. To compile and run a FORTRAN program, one would
- .R F4 --- invoke the FORTRAN compiler
- *DTA1:PROG3=DTA2:PROG3,SUB3A,SUB3B --- specify binary output and source input
- .R LOADER 30 --- invoke the loader, allocate 30K of memory
- *DTA1:PROG3 --- specify binary object to load
- *SYS:/S --- let the loader find the appropriate subroutine libraries
- .SAVE DTA1:PROG3 --- write the executable to DTA1
- (The DOT is a monitor prompt and the Star/Asterisk is an application prompt)
 
 
The PDP-10 had CCL. Key to its improvements over its predecessor were:[2]
- multi-step commands: .EX PROG3,SUB3A,SUB3B
- would check to see if any of the 3 needed to be recompiled (and did so if necessary)
- run the object program loader (including needed subroutine libraries)
- start running the program
 
 
- advanced command file: .EX @RUNPROG3.CMD
- would run the command(s) in the .CMD file
 
 
Commands
The following table contains a list of CCL commands.[1]
| CCL command (full form) | CCL command (short form) | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| BACKSPACE | BAC | Runs CAMP. A magnetic tape or cassette is spaced backward a specified number of files or records. | 
| BOOT | BO | |
| CCL | CCL | Disables the CCL program on the OS/8 Keyboard Monitor residing on the system device. | 
| COMPARE | COMP | Runs SRCCOM. Compares/shows differences between two source files. Although line by line, permits "catch up." | 
| COMPILE | COM | Produces binary files and/or compilation listings for specified program files. | 
| COPY | COP | Transfers files from one I/O device to another. | 
| CORE | COR | |
| CREATE | CREA | Runs EDIT and opens a new file for creation. | 
| CREF | CREF | |
| DATE | DA | |
| DEASSIGN | DEA | |
| DELETE | DEL | Deletes one or more files from disk or DECtape. | 
| DIRECT | DIR | |
| EDIT | ED | Runs EDIT. Opens an already existing file for editing. | 
| EOF | EOF | |
| EXECUTE | EXE | |
| HELP | HE | Prints information on specified OS/8 programs. | 
| LIST | LI | |
| LOAD | LO | |
| MAKE | MAK | Runs TECO. Opens the specified file for output. | 
| MAP | MAP | Runs BITMAP. | 
| MUNG | MUNG | Runs a TECO Macro; command line parameters give added adaptability. | 
| PAL | PAL | Runs PAL8. Assembles the source file specified as the argument. | 
| PRI | Runs a program named LPTSPL. | |
| PUNCH | PU | Runs PIP. Punches the file specified on paper tape. | 
| RENAME | REN | Renames one or more files on disk or DECtape. | 
| RES | RES | Runs RESORC. | 
| REWIND | REW | |
| SKIP | SKIP | |
| SQUISH | SQ | Runs PIP's "squeeze" / defrag tool | 
| SUBMIT | SU | Runs the BATCH program. | 
| TECO | TE | (Text Editor and COrrector, a sophisticated text editor with MACRO capabilities). | 
| TYPE | TY | |
| UA | UA | |
| UB | UB | |
| UC | UC | |
| UNLOAD | UNL | |
| VERSION | VER | Prints the version numbers of the OS/8 Keyboard Monitor and CCL. | 
| ZERO | ZERO | 
References
- 1 2 "Concise Command Language" (CCL)."OS/8 Handbook" (PDF). April 1974. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
- 1 2 Peter Clark (July 1982). "DEC TIMESHARING (1965)". The DEC Professional. p. 34.
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