DYNAMO (programming language)
DYNAMO is a simulation language and accompanying graphical notation developed within the system dynamics analytical framework. It was originally for industrial dynamics but was soon extended to other applications, including population and resource studies
and urban planning.
DYNAMO was initially developed under the direction of Jay Wright Forrester in the late 1950s, by Dr. Phyllis Fox,
Alexander L. Pugh III, Grace Duren,
and others
at the M.I.T. Computation Center.
DYNAMO was used for the system dynamics simulations of global resource depletion reported in the Club of Rome's Limits to Growth, but has since fallen into disuse.
Beginnings
In 1958, Forrester unwittingly instigated DYNAMO's development when he asked an MIT staff programmer to compute needed solutions to some equations, for a Harvard Business Review paper he was writing about industrial dynamics.The programmer, Richard Bennett, chose to implement a system that took coded equations as symbolic input and computed solutions. SIMPLE became the proof-of-concept for DYNAMO: rather than have a specialist programmer "hard-code" a special-purpose solver in a general purpose programming language, users could specify a system's equations in a special simulation language and get simulation output from one program execution.
Design goals
DYNAMO was designed to emphasize the following:- ease-of-use for the industrial dynamics modeling community ;
- immediate execution of the compiled model, without producing an intermediate object file; and
- providing graphical output, with line printer and pen plotter graphics.
Implementation
The earliest versions were written in assembly language for the IBM 704, then for the IBM 709 and IBM 7090. DYNAMO II was written in AED-0, an extended version of Algol 60.Dynamo II/F, in 1971, generated portable FORTRAN code
and both Dynamo II/F and Dynamo III improved the system's portability by being written in FORTRAN.
Originally designed for batch processing on mainframe computers, it was made available on minicomputers in the late 1970s,
and became available as "micro-Dynamo" on personal computers in the early 1980s.
The language went through several revisions from DYNAMO II up to DYNAMO IV in 1983,