DDT


Meaning of DDT in English

transcription, транскрипция: [ /D-D-T/ n. ]

[from the insecticide para-dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethene] 1. Generic term for a program that assists in debugging other programs by showing individual machine instructions in a readable symbolic form and letting the user change them. In this sense the term DDT is now archaic, having been widely displaced by `debugger' or names of individual programs like adb , sdb , dbx , or gdb . 2. [ITS] Under MIT's fabled ITS operating system, DDT (running under the alias HACTRN, a six-letterism for `Hack Translator') was also used as the shell or top level command language used to execute other programs. 3. Any one of several specific DDTs (sense 1) supported on early DEC hardware and CP/M. The PDP-10 Reference Handbook (1969) contained a footnote on the first page of the documentation for DDT that illuminates the origin of the term: Historical footnote: DDT was developed at MIT for the PDP-1computer in 1961. At that time DDT stood for "DEC DebuggingTape". Since then, the idea of an on-line debugging program haspropagated throughout the computer industry. DDT programs are nowavailable for all DEC computers. Since media other than tape arenow frequently used, the more descriptive name "Dynamic DebuggingTechnique" has been adopted, retaining the DDT abbreviation. Confusionbetween DDT-10 and another well known pesticide,dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane(C14-H9-Cl5)should be minimal since each attacks adifferent, and apparently mutually exclusive, class of bugs.

(The `tape' referred to was, incidentally, not magnetic but paper.) Sadly, this quotation was removed from later editions of the handbook after the suit s took over and DEC became much more `businesslike'.

The history above is known to many old-time hackers. But there's more: Peter Samson, compiler of the original TMRC lexicon, reports that he named `DDT' after a similar tool on the TX-0 computer, the direct ancestor of the PDP-1 built at MIT's Lincoln Lab in 1957. The debugger on that ground-breaking machine (the first transistorized computer) rejoiced in the name FLIT (FLexowriter Interrogation Tape).

Jargon File English vocabulary.      Английский словарь жаргона.