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  1. Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code. The original Dartmouth BASIC was designed in 1964 by John George Kemeny and Thomas Eugene Kurtz at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, USA …

  2. BASIC versions were so rapidly appearing that ANSI (American National Standard Institute) recognised in 1974 the need for a standard implementation of the BASIC language.

  3. The number γ is usually considered to be the third most important important non-basic number in mathematics, following closely π and e. √ i = −1 (the imaginary unit) was first used by Leonhard …

  4. Each release of BASIC-80 consists of three upward compatible versions: 8K, Extended and Disk. This manual is a reference for all three versions of BASIC-80, release 5,0 and later.

  5. BASIC A Manual for BASIC, the elementary algebraic language designed for use with the Dartmouth Time Sharing System. 1 October

  6. It works like any other language option on Wikipedia, and as of now, there are over 150,000 entries. These entries are shorter and have simpler language structures than regular Wikipedia articles.

  7. It provides a data which can be used by any language Wikipedia, and by anyone else, under a public domain license. This guide shows you how to do some basic editing of individual entries.