COBOL Compiler and COBOL Interpretor Directory
Links to several COBOL Compilers and Interpretors.
COBOL FAQ
The FAQ contains pointers and information on everything COBOL, from COBOL compiler vendors' names and contact information to common USAGE definitions.
Cobol For GCC
A project to produce a free COBOL compiler compliant with the COBOL 85 Standard, integrated into the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC).
CObol2Java
An automatic tool for fast migration from Cobol source code to Java source code. Also Cobol2Java API is a set of Java API to build your own COBOL to Java source code translator.
ESI Services: Cobol
ESI specializes in Windows-based COBOL development tools for creating client/server applications for open, multi-platform environments including Win95, NT, UNIX, IBM, and Unisys.
Fujitsu NetCOBOL for .NET
Fujitsu provides COBOL compiled to target Microsoft.NET.
Fujitsu NetCOBOL for Windows
NetCOBOL (previously called Fujitsu COBOL) for Windows is a complete COBOL development environment that allows you to create standalone COBOL applications and/or components for use with Microsoft visual tools.
GNU Cobol2C
(former GNU Cobol) A project to make a full Cobol-85 compiler, available for free under the GPL. A minimal Cobol-to-C translator is now available
ICOBOL and VXCOBOL
Egan Systems, Inc. develops the ICOBOL and VXCOBOL programming environments
KOBOL
Implementation of COBOL for Windows and Linux. By theKompany.com.
LegacyJ PERCobol
LegacyJ provides an ANSI-85 and extensions COBOL compiler, with modern IDE (Eclipse). PERCobol compiles COBOL source to Java bytecode for execution as applications or within appservers, with maintenance and debug remaining in COBOL.
Liant RM/COBOL
Liant includes a comprehensive portfolio of integrated tools that enables you to maintain a single set of source while deploying applications on the most popular open platforms.
OpenCOBOL
An experimental implementation of a COBOL frontend for GCC. [Open source, LGPL]
TinyCOBOL Project
The TinyCOBOL Project is a COBOL compiler being actively developed by members of the free software community. It is being developed on the Linux OS, using a mix of C, LEX/YACC. It generates GNU assembler code, thus requires the GNU assembler and linker programs to create an executable binary.