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A Functional Quantum Programming Language
Warning - it's a draft. From the Types Forum. A simple equation solver using attribute access and introspectionA nice hack which makes use of several language features to create a fun programming experience (or "user inteface" if you want). Description Logics in Literate HaskellExperiments from Graham Klyne:
See also rdfweb-dev post, "Haskell vs. Ada vs. C++ vs. Awk vs. ..., An Experiment in Software Prototyping Productivity" (PS format) By Danny Ayers at 2004-09-08 19:16 | Functional | Logic/Declarative | Semantics | XML | 10 comments | other blogs | 13750 reads
SAT 3 Proof with E Prover via OWLAn interesting little Semantic Web-related development reported by Jos De Roo (creator of the Java/C# Euler inference engine). He's got the E Prover (an equational theorem prover for clausal logic), to find a proof for the OWL (Web Ontology Language) test case "inconsistent502" (RDF, variations), which is a Description Logic encoding of one of the classic SAT 3 problems. By Danny Ayers at 2004-09-08 19:06 | Logic/Declarative | Semantics | Theory | XML | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 8087 reads
Combining lazy and eager evaluation of termsIn an attempt to combine some of the benefits of lazy and eager evaluation, I have implemented a language with an evaluation strategy which is strict with respect to divergence, but performs lazy evaluation on certain intermediate subterms to allow a more expressive use of recursion. Tim Sweeney started this interesting Types-list thread. A summary of the responses he receieved is here. Erlang tutorial
Seems like a nice tutorial.
Includes the expected chapters on concurrent programming and robustness, of course. By Ehud Lamm at 2004-09-06 11:39 | Parallel/Distributed | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 23609 reads
Pythologic - Prolog syntax in PythonThe "recipe" for Pythologic is given and discussed here: http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/303057 The discussion is interesting in itself, as it identifies the "wildly unpythonic" and "abusive" "overhaul of the function semantics" involved. One thing I've always liked about Python is the extent to which it supports this kind of metaprogramming. You can, if the mood takes you, quite seriously deform the language's conventional semantics. That isn't necessarily a good thing; but it can be fun sometimes. David Mertz has written an article on embedding declarative mini-languages in Python, which demonstrates some other techniques. By Dominic Fox at 2004-09-03 09:28 | Meta-Programming | login or register to post comments | other blogs | 29416 reads
A Deeper Look At MetafunctionsIn this Artima article, David Abrahams and Aleksey Gurtovoy take a deeper look at metafunctions, and introduce the Boost metaprogramming library. The article is an extract from the authors' forthcoming C++ Template Metaprogramming. The authors' example application of C++ metafunctions is compile-time dimensional analysis. Higher order metafunctions, partial metafunction application and lazy evaluation are also discussed. Wouldn't an Amazon sponsored link to the book be a good idea here? Schematics Scheme CookbookThe Schematics Scheme Cookbook is a collaborative effort to produce practical documentation for using the Scheme language, particularly in commercial environments. It is focused on PLT Scheme, although other Scheme dialects are supported as far as possible. A nice attempt by several of lambda's friends to provide practical help for people trying to solve real problems using Scheme. I think the community around any non-mainstream language must encourage and support such efforts for the language to have any chance of gaining momentum. This is somewhat related to our discussion of real life programming using Haskell, and about the success of so-called scripting languages. I must admit that I use Python for my scripting work. Tried to use Scheme but it was too much of a bother. Guess it's time to try again. GvR: Rejecting the J2 decorators proposal
Yet another example of language design in action. The specific issues Guido is concerned about are perhaps of less importance than this concluding remark,
A warning: some people have shown examples of extreme uses of decorators. I've seen decorators proposed for argument and return type annotations, and even one that used a decorator to create an object that did a regular expression substitution. Those uses are cute, but I recommend being conservative when deciding between using a decorator or some other approach, especially in code that will see a large audience (like 3rd party library packages). Using decorators for type annotations in particular looks tedious, and this particular application is so important that I expect Python 3000 will have optional type declarations integrated into the argument list. |
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