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Ωmega

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Omega
Original author(s)Tim Sheard
Developer(s)Portland State University
Initial releaseMarch 3, 2005; 19 years ago (2005-03-03)
Stable release
1.5 / April 29, 2011; 13 years ago (2011-04-29)
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeInterpreter
LicenseBSD 3-clause
Websiteweb.cecs.pdx.edu/~sheard/Omega

The Omega interpreter[1] is a strict pure functional programming interpreter similar to the Hugs Haskell interpreter. The syntax closely resembles that of Haskell but with important differences:

Other differences are documented in the Omega user guide.[1]

Omega was developed by Professor Tim Sheard of Portland State University's Computer Science Department as a language with an infinite hierarchy of computational levels, e.g., value, type, kind, sort. The underlying concept is that data, and functions manipulating data, can be introduced at any level.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Sheard, Tim. Ωmega Users' Guide. Retrieved 2007-06-09.
  2. ^ Sheard, Tim; Linger, Nathan (June 30, 2007). "Programming in Ωmega". 2nd Central European Functional Programming School.
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