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'''HiSoft Systems'''<ref>http://www.hisoft.co.uk/about/about.html AbouthtmlAbout Hisoft {{dlWebarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111029231706/http://www.hisoft.co.uk/about/about.html |date=April2011-10-29 2019}}</ref> is a software company based in the UK, creators of a range of programming tools for microcomputers in 1980s and 1990s. Their first products were Pascal and Assembler implementations for the NASCOM 1 and 2 kit-based computers, followed by Pascal and C for {{nowrap|[[ZX Spectrum]]}} computers, as well as a [[BASIC]] compiler for this platform and a C compiler for CP/M. While compilers for the {{nowrap|ZX Spectrum}} were typical products for this platform, with integrated editor, compiler and runtime environment fitting in RAM together with program's source, the C compiler for CP/M was typical for this [[operating system]], batch operated, with separate compilation and linking stages.
 
Their most well-known products were the Devpac assembler IDE environments (earlier known as GenST and GenAm for the [[Atari ST]] and [[Amiga]], respectively). The Devpac IDE was a full editor/assembler/debugger environment written entirely in 68k assembler and was a favourite tool among programmers on the Atari GEM platform.