<P> International Algebraic Language (IAL, ALGOL 58) and ALGOL (1958 and 1960) thus introduced: = for assignment, leaving the standard = available for equality, a convention followed by CPL, ALGOL W, ALGOL 68, Basic Combined Programming Language (BCPL), Simula, SET Language (SETL), Pascal, Smalltalk, Modula - 2, Ada, Standard ML, OCaml, Eiffel, Object Pascal (Delphi), Oberon, Dylan, VHSIC Hardware Description Language (VHDL), and several other languages . </P> <P> This uniform de facto standard among most programming languages was eventually changed, indirectly, by a minimalist compiled language named B. Its sole intended application was as a vehicle for a first port of (a then very primitive) Unix, but it also evolved into the very influential C language . </P> <P> B started off as a syntactically changed variant of the systems programming language BCPL, a simplified (and typeless) version of CPL . In what has been described as a "strip - down" process, the and and or operators of BCPL were replaced with & and (which would later become && and, respectively .). In the same process, the ALGOL style: = of BCPL was replaced by = in B . The reason for all this being unknown . As variable updates had no special syntax in B (such as let or similar) and were allowed in expressions, this non standard meaning of the equal sign meant that the traditional semantics of the equal sign now had to be associated with another symbol . Ken Thompson used the ad hoc = = combination for this . </P> <P> As a small type system was later introduced, B then became C. The popularity of this language along with its association with Unix, led to Java, C#, and many other languages following suit, syntactically, despite this needless conflict with the mathematical meaning of the equal sign . </P>

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