"A♯ (Axiom)"
Paradigm |
multi-paradigm object-oriented functional | ||||
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Designed by | Richard Dimick Jenks, Barry Trager, Stephen Watt, James Davenport, Robert Sutor, Scott Morrison | ||||
Developer | IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center | ||||
Platform | Cross-platform (multi-platform) (16, 32, and 64 bit): RS/6000, SPARC, Alpha, IA-32, Intel 286, Motorola 680x0, System/370 | ||||
OS | Cross-platform (multi-platform): Linux, AIX, SunOS, HP-UX, NeXT, Mach, OS/2, DOS, Microsoft Windows, VMS, VM/CMS | ||||
.as | |||||
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A♯ (A sharp) is an object-oriented functional programming language distributed as a separable component of Version 2 of the Axiom computer algebra system. A# types and functions are first-class values and can be used freely in conjunction with an extensive library of data structures and other mathematical abstractions. A key design guideline for A# was suitability of compilation to portable and efficient machine code.
Development of A# has now switched to the Aldor programming language.
There is both an A# optimising compiler and an A# intermediate code interpreter. The compiler can produce any of:
- stand-alone executable programs
- object libraries in native operating system formats
- portable bytecode libraries
- C source code, or
- Lisp source code.
The following C compilers are supported: gcc, Xlc, Sun Studio Compiler, Borland, Metaware and MIPS C.
References
- Stephen M. Watt, Peter A. Broadbery, Samuel S. Dooley, Pietro Iglio, Scott C. Morrison, Jonathan M. Steinbach, Robert S. Sutor (1994-07-20). "A First Report on the A♯ Compiler" (PDF) (in German). IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center. p. 7. Retrieved 2013-01-06.
This article is based on material taken from A# at the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing prior to 1 November 2008 and incorporated under the "relicensing" terms of the GFDL, version 1.3 or later.