List of language developers: Difference between revisions

From APL Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
:''This page lists notable language developers only. For all APL dialects including those without notable developers, see [[timeline of APL dialects]]. To choose a dialect for use today, consider [[Running APL]].''
:''This page lists notable language developers only. For all APL dialects including those without notable developers, see [[Timeline of APL dialects]]. To choose a dialect for use today, consider [[Running APL]].''


A language developer is an organization or individual that develops and distributes a programming language. This includes vendors, which are companies that sell APL implementations, as well as developers of free implementations. In the [[wikipedia:Mainframe computer|mainframe]] era it was common for hardware vendors to create APL implementations in machine code for their particular architecture. Developers active today use portable languages in order to support multiple architectures.
A language developer is an organization or individual that develops and distributes a programming language. This includes vendors, which are companies that sell APL implementations, as well as developers of free implementations. In the [[wikipedia:Mainframe computer|mainframe]] era it was common for hardware vendors to create APL implementations in machine code for their particular architecture. Developers active today use portable languages in order to support multiple architectures.

Revision as of 03:53, 26 November 2020

This page lists notable language developers only. For all APL dialects including those without notable developers, see Timeline of APL dialects. To choose a dialect for use today, consider Running APL.

A language developer is an organization or individual that develops and distributes a programming language. This includes vendors, which are companies that sell APL implementations, as well as developers of free implementations. In the mainframe era it was common for hardware vendors to create APL implementations in machine code for their particular architecture. Developers active today use portable languages in order to support multiple architectures.

Past developers

Hardware vendors with APL implementations

Portable array language developers

Active developers

Organizations

Individual developers


APL development [edit]
Interface SessionTyping glyphs (on Linux) ∙ FontsText editors
Publications IntroductionsLearning resourcesSimple examplesAdvanced examplesMnemonicsStandardsA Dictionary of APLCase studiesDocumentation suitesBooksPapersVideosPeriodicalsTerminology (Chinese, German) ∙ Neural networksError trapping with Dyalog APL (in forms)
Sharing code Backwards compatibilityAPLcartAPLTreeAPL-CationDfns workspaceTatinCider
Implementation Developers (APL2000, Dyalog, GNU APL community, IBM, IPSA, STSC) ∙ ResourcesOpen-sourceMagic functionPerformanceAPL hardware