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Re: Programming language similarity

From Derek Jones <derek@NOSPAM-knosof.co.uk>
Newsgroups comp.compilers
Subject Re: Programming language similarity
Date 2022-04-25 19:35 +0100
Organization Compilers Central
Message-ID <22-04-018@comp.compilers> (permalink)
References <22-04-012@comp.compilers> <22-04-014@comp.compilers>

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Fernando,

> Your repository is very nice! Can I use the "language info" part in the class
> on programming language paradigms? It will be nice to give students some idea

Please do.  The code is under a GPL license.

> about the number of keywords in different programming languages, for
> instance.

I was surprised by the diversity of words used.

> By the way, perhaps you should consider also comparing the languages with
> regards to the static and the dynamic aspects of their type systems, e.g.:
> typing discipline (static, dynamic, gradual?), type verification (inference,
> annotations, mixed?), type enforcement (weak, strong), static type equivalence
> (nominal, structural, mixed?), etc. That might lead to very different trees.

I looked into building a tree based on allowed implicit types, with
the hope of coming up with a measure of strong/week typing.

A list of implicit conversions performed by a language seems like a
good start. But this approach makes Fortran 77 look like it's strongly
typed; there are fewer implicit conversions than other languages
because it supports fewer types, e.g., no enums or pointers. C's
relatively large number of integer types, and the corresponding
implicit conversions, make it look weakly typed compared to languages
with fewer integer types (and hence fewer implicit conversions).

The list of characteristics you list might be combined in some
meaningful way, such that a type 'distance' tree could be constructed.
Lots of careful reading of language specifications would be needed to
figure out the details.

> About that: I don't know of other studies. There is the article on Wikipedia
> (Programming Languages Comparison), but it does not cite a paper with a
> comparative study.

Some of the Yes/No classifications on this page are somewhat surprising
(at least to me)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_programming_languages

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Thread

Programming language similarity Derek Jones <derek@NOSPAM-knosof.co.uk> - 2022-04-25 00:00 +0100
  Re: Programming language similarity Derek Jones <derek@NOSPAM-knosof.co.uk> - 2022-04-25 08:59 +0100
  Re: Programming language similarity Fernando <pronesto@gmail.com> - 2022-04-25 04:24 -0700
    Re: Programming language similarity Derek Jones <derek@NOSPAM-knosof.co.uk> - 2022-04-25 19:35 +0100
  Re: Programming language similarity Jan Ziak <0xe2.0x9a.0x9b@gmail.com> - 2022-04-25 06:00 -0700
    Re: Programming language similarity Derek Jones <derek@NOSPAM-knosof.co.uk> - 2022-04-25 20:51 +0100
      Re: Programming language similarity gah4 <gah4@u.washington.edu> - 2022-04-25 14:58 -0700
        Re: Programming language similarity Derek Jones <derek@NOSPAM-knosof.co.uk> - 2022-04-26 00:50 +0100
  Re: Programming language similarity Meshach Mitchell <meshach.mitchell@gmail.com> - 2022-04-25 12:06 -0400

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