Language-oriented programming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Language oriented programming is a style of computer programming, via metaprogramming in which, rather than solving problems in general-purpose programming languages, the programmer creates one or more domain-specific programming languages for the problem first, and solves the problem in those languages. This concept is described in detail in the paper by Martin Ward entitled Language Oriented Programming published in Software - Concepts and Tools, Vol.15, No.4, pp 147-161, 1994 and in the article by Sergey Dmitriev entitled Language Oriented Programming: The Next Programming Paradigm.
Existing implementations of this concept include:
- Meta Programming System by JetBrains.
- XMF by Ceteva.
- openArchitectureWare.
- Whole Platform.
- Microsoft Software Factories.
- Intentional Software.
- LayerD.
A book that describes this concept, with examples, is Building Better Applications: a Theory of Efficient Software Development.[1] It takes the approach to capture requirements in the user's terms, and then to try to create an implementation language as isomorphic as possible to the user's descriptions, so that the mapping between requirements and implementation is as direct as possible. A measure of the closeness of this isomorphism is the "redundancy" of the language, defined as the number of editing operations needed to implement a stand-alone change in requirements. It is not assumed a-priori what is the best language for implementing the new language. Rather, the developer can choose among options created by analysis of the information flows — what information is acquired, what its structure is, when it is acquired, from whom, and what is done with it. See Linguistic Method.
[edit] See also
- Model Driven Engineering
- Domain Specific Languages
- Aspect-oriented programming
- Generative programming
- Intentional Programming
- Code generation
- Dialecting
- Metalinguistic abstraction
- Linguistic Method
- Service-Oriented Modeling Framework (SOMF)
[edit] References
- ^ Dunlavey 1994.
- Dunlavey (1994). Building Better Applications: a Theory of Efficient Software Development. International Thomson Publishing. ISBN 0-442-01740-5.
[edit] External links
- Ceteva's XMF 'Language Oriented Programming' language
- uCalc Language Builder
- Language Oriented Programming
- Papers by Martin Ward
- Language Oriented Programming: The Next Programming Paradigm
- Sergey Dmitriev's personal homepage
- The Meta-Programming System
- http://www.martinfowler.com/articles/languageWorkbench.html
- http://msdn.microsoft.com/architecture/overview/softwarefactories/
- http://osl.iu.edu/~tveldhui/papers/dagstuhl1998/
- http://research.microsoft.com/research/pubs/view.aspx?tr_id=4
- http://www.intentsoft.com/
- http://oozy.blogspot.com/
- http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/377
- http://www.paulgraham.com/onlisp.html
- Language Oriented Programming (LOP)
- LayerD framework