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:Developer.com: Open Source High-level Languages in Your Neighborhood
Developer.com: Open Source High-level Languages in Your Neighborhood
Feb 12, 2003, 11 :30 UTC (2 Talkback[s]) (7414 reads)

(Other stories by Thomas Gutschmidt)

"One seemingly bankable trend is that every day computer languages become easier to understand, and become more like human languages. The concept that easier to understand languages could lead to less error prone and more rapid development was the basis for Fortran II way back in 1958, and the foundation for the high-level languages of today. Since the 50s, however, numerous high-level languages have propped up. You've heard and worked with most of these. Fortran is still used in engineering, and general programming problems are often solved with C, C++, Java, and Perl, which are all considered high-level.

"But what about the more obscure high-level languages? Dozens of paradigms have propped up, and every day there seems to be a new language on the block. Here is a handful of popular modern high-level languages, what they are being used for, and where they are hiding in the industry today..."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
IBM developerWorks: Ruby language--open source gem from Japan(Feb 10, 2000)
eInteractive 0.3 - Eiffel library for interactive applications(Oct 16, 1999)


Index Mode   |   Flat Mode   |   Thread Mode   |   Thread Flat  
  Talkback(s) Name  and Date
Eiffel, Lua, Smalltalk & Sqeak, Python,  ...   very small handful   
jw
Feb 13, 2003, 01:28:09
 
I've been searching for years for so ...   And how about Judoscript?!   
P.S
Feb 17, 2003, 20:41:40
 
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