ARGUS, an acronym for Automatic Routine Generating and Updating System, was an Assembly Language devised in the late 1950s by Honeywell for their Honeywell 800 and 1800 computers. As with other Assembly Languages, each line of ARGUS was copied on to one card and related to one word in memory, except that one ARGUS command, RESERVE, could reserve any specified number of words in the position specified. The RESERVE command was also exceptional in not prescribing the initial data in the reserved words. With a few exceptions Machine Language words were coded in the same order as the ARGUS lines.
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