Direct mode

Not to be confused with Immediate mode (computer graphics).

Direct mode, also known as immediate mode[1][2] is a computing term referring to the input of textual commands outside the context of a program. The command would be executed immediately and the results printed on screen, in contrast to programming mode where nothing would be executed until a specific command was given. (BASIC's RUN is an example of a direct mode command.) Some commands could be used in either mode, while others were exclusive to one or the other.

Direct mode was most often used on 8-bit systems such as the Commodore 64 and Atari 800 series, though commands entered at a Unix shell can be thought of as direct mode equivalents to shell scripts, and modern interpreted languages like Python and Perl include REPL shells where commands may be entered for immediate evaluation and execution.

Example

Non-direct mode:

10 PRINT "HELLO WIKIPEDIA"

READY.

RUN

HELLO WIKIPEDIA

READY.

Direct mode:

PRINT "HELLO WIKIPEDIA"

HELLO WIKIPEDIA

READY.

See also

References

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