GEORGE (General Order Generator) is a programming language invented by Charles Leonard Hamblin in 1957.
[1][2][3][4] It was designed around a push-down pop-up stack for arithmetic operations, and employed reverse Polish notation.
Following the reverse Polish form, an assignment statement to evaluate the formula
The final operation, namely (y), returned the value of the expression to storage without changing the status of the accumulator stack.
Assuming that the value on the top of the accumulator stack was not required immediately, it would be removed (cleared) by using the operator (;).
The following program reads in eight values and forms their sum: Manipulation of vectors and matrices requires subscript notation.
The above GEORGE coding table assisted in transcribing a program onto punch cards.