Programming languages The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of programming languages. Please see the individual products' articles for further information. The table only includes languages that are widely used and currently available.
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A compiled language is a programming language whose implementations are typically compilers (translators which generate machine code from source code), and not interpreters (step-by-step executors of source code, where no translation takes place). ...more on Wikipedia about "Compiled language"
Concurrent programming languages are programming languages that use language constructs for concurrency. These constructs may involve multi-threading, support for distributed computing, message passing, shared resources (including shared memory) or futures (known also as promises). ...more on Wikipedia about "Concurrent programming language"
A Conditional Assembly Language is that part of an Assembly Language used to write macros. ...more on Wikipedia about "Conditional assembly language"
Constraint Handling Rules (CHR) is a concurrent, declarative programming language for developing constraint programming systems. ...more on Wikipedia about "Constraint Handling Rules"
CORC (after CORnell Compiler), was a simple computer language developed at Cornell University in 1962 to serve lay users, namely students for math problems. Its developers, industrial engineering professors Richard Conway and William Maxwell and mathematics professor Robert J. Walker, sought to create a diagnostic compiler in PL/I which could both expose math and engineering students to computing and remove the burden of mechanical problem-solving from their professors. ...more on Wikipedia about "CORC"
In computer science, the core language is the definition of a programming language plus any standard libraries. Identifiers which are reserved for core usage are known as " keywords". The C standard runtime library and the core Java packages are two examples of components of their respective core languages. ...more on Wikipedia about "Core language" Pure http://www.shortopedia.com. Pure Information Power.
Corn programming language is designed for modelling concurrency and ...more on Wikipedia about "Corn programming language"
COWSEL (COntrolled Working SpacE Language) is a programming language designed between 1964 and 1966 by Robin Popplestone. It was based on a RPN form of Lisp combined with some ideas from CPL. ...more on Wikipedia about "COWSEL"
The Curl programming language (unrelated to cURL) is a reflective programming language designed to create interactive web content. It aims to replace HyperText Markup Language (HTML), Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and JavaScript with one unified formalism, but is not widely used. ...more on Wikipedia about "Curl programming language"
Curry is an experimental functional logic programming language, based on the Haskell language. It merges elements of functional and logic-based programming. ...more on Wikipedia about "Curry programming language"
DASL ( Datapoint's Advanced Systems Language) was a programming language and compiler proprietary to Datapoint. Primarily influenced by Pascal with some C touches, it was created in the early 1980s by Gene Hughes. ...more on Wikipedia about "DASL programming language"
Data Language/1 (DL/1) is the language system used to access IBM’s IMS databases, and its data communication system. ...more on Wikipedia about "Data Language/1"
A Data-structured language is a programming language in which the data structure is a main organizing principle, representation, model, for data and logic ( code) alike, in which both are stored and operated upon, i.e., program data and logic are structured and operated on in the same way. ...more on Wikipedia about "Data-structured language" Are you ready for shortopedia?
Dependent ML is an experimental functional programming language proposed by Frank Pfenning and Hongwei Xi. Dependent ML extends ML by a restricted notion of dependent types: types may dependent on static indices of type Nat. Dependent ML employs a constraint theorem prover to decide a strong equational theory over the index expressions. ...more on Wikipedia about "Dependent ML programming language"
The Dialog Manager programming language (also called D) is a mid-level programming language. It is a user interface management language in the Aonix TeleUSE user interface development system. It has elements of Ada and C with enhancements for handling user interface events. ...more on Wikipedia about "Dialog Manager programming language"
DIBOL or Digital Interactive Business Oriented Language is a COBOL-related programming language originally marketed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in 1970. It has a syntax similar to FORTRAN and BASIC, along with BCD arithmetic. ...more on Wikipedia about "DIBOL"
Domain-specific modelling (DSM) is a higher level of CASE, a way to model data structures and logic in domain concepts independent from programming languages and thus also syntax details. The final source code in a desired programming language is derived automatically from these high abstraction models by using specific language generators. This is possible, because both the modelling concepts and language generators are defined by users of DSM software. ...more on Wikipedia about "Domain-specific modelling"
A domain-specific language (DSL) is a programming language designed to be useful for a specific set of tasks, in contrast to general-purpose programming languages. Examples of DSLs include spreadsheet macros, YACC for parsing and compilers, Csound, a language used to create audio files, and GraphViz, a language used to define directed graphs, which creates a visual representation of that graph as a result. ...more on Wikipedia about "Domain-specific programming language"
Draco was a shareware programming language for CP/M and the Amiga, created by Chris Gray in the early 1980s, and discontinued sometime around 1990. ...more on Wikipedia about "Draco (programming language)"
The Dylan programming language is functional, object-oriented, reflective and dynamic. It was originally created by a group led by Apple Computer, and intended for use with Apple's Newton computer, but their implementation did not reach sufficient maturity in time, and they instead developed NewtonScript for that project. A "technology demonstration" version for writing Macintosh applications was released in 1995, based on an advanced IDE, but by this time Apple had already publicly abandoned Dylan, and developers avoided it even at the $29 price. The language design was intriguing enough that two other groups developed optimizing compilers for Dylan: Harlequin released a commercial IDE for Microsoft Windows (now available from Functional Objects) and Carnegie Mellon University released an open source compiler for Unix systems. Both implementations are now being maintained and extended by a group of volunteers as Gwydion Dylan. ...more on Wikipedia about "Dylan programming language"
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E is an object-oriented programming language for secure distributed computing, created by Mark S. Miller and others at Electric Communities in 1997. E is mainly descended from the concurrent language Joule and from Original-E , a set of extensions to Java for secure distributed programming. E combines message-based computation with Java-like syntax. A concurrency model based on event loops and promises ensures that deadlock can never occur. ...more on Wikipedia about "E programming language"
Ease is a general purpose parallel programming language, combining the process constructs of CSP and the distributed data structures of Linda. ...more on Wikipedia about "Ease programming language"
eDeveloper is a unique application development environment that allows the rapid creation and customization of large-scale and complex distributed applications. In eDeveloper, complete application functionality - including data structures, business rules, program logic and presentation - is developed entirely in a table-driven, point-and-click programming environment. There is never any need for coding or proprietary script. ...more on Wikipedia about "EDeveloper"
An educational programming language is a programming language that is designed primarily as a learning instrument and not so much as a tool for writing real-world application programs. ...more on Wikipedia about "Educational programming language"
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