Standard Interchange Language

Summary

The Standard Interchange Language [1] is a data interchange language standard developed by the Food Distribution Retails Systems Group for the interchange of information between software programs. It is a subset of SQL (Structured Query Language) and acts as an interface standard for transferring data between proprietary store systems like Direct Store Delivery and Point of sale. It was introduced in 1989 in the United States.

References edit

  1. ^ Thayer, Warren. "Can SIL break the computer language barrier? The Standard Interchange Language — a data exchange standard designed with wholesalers in mind — may give retail systems integration a big boost", Progressive Grocer, January 1991.

External links edit

  • Expert: standard interchange language[dead link]
  • Supermarket industry develops common software protocol[dead link]