PV-Wave

PV-WAVE (Precision Visuals - Workstation Analysis and Visualization Environment) is an array oriented fourth-generation programming language used by engineers, scientists, researchers, business analysts and software developers to build and deploy visual data analysis applications. In January 2019, PV-Wave parent Rogue Wave Software was acquired by Minneapolis, Minnesota-based application software developer Perforce.[1]

PV-Wave
Designed byPrecision Visuals
DeveloperPerforce

History

PV-WAVE was originally developed by a company called Precision Visuals, based in Boulder, CO. In 1992, the IMSL Numerical Libraries and Precision Visuals merged and the new company was renamed Visual Numerics.[2]

PV-WAVE is closely related to the IDL (programming language), from whose code-base PV-WAVE originated. The shared history of PV-WAVE and IDL began in 1988, when Precision Visuals entered into an agreement with Research Systems, Incorporated (RSI, the original developer of IDL) under which Precision Visuals resold IDL under the name PV-WAVE. In September 1990, Precision Visuals exercised an option in its agreement with RSI to purchase a copy of the IDL source code. Since that time, IDL and PV-WAVE have been on separate development tracks: each product has been enhanced, supported, and maintained separately by its respective company.

In May 2009, Visual Numerics was acquired by Rogue Wave Software.[3]

In January 2019, Rogue Wave Software was acquired by Minneapolis, Minnesota-based application software developer Perforce.[1]

About

Due to their common history, PV-WAVE and IDL share a similar FORTRAN-like syntax, as well as many common commands, functions, and subroutines.

gollark: Oh, right, I'll refresh the page.
gollark: No.
gollark: <@341618941317349376> PLEASE HELP ME
gollark: I can't find the option for setting statii.
gollark: Hmm, how do I enable such a thing?

References

  1. "Perforce expands DevOps portfolio with Rogue Wave acquisition". sdtimes.com. 2019-01-22. Retrieved 2019-02-10.
  2. "Short Takes". Computerworld. 1993-01-11. Retrieved 2019-02-10.
  3. "Rogue Wave eats Acumem". The Register. 2010-10-04. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
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