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INTRODUCTION "When the only tool you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail" (Abraham Maslow) Course Themes/Topics • • • • • • Syntax & Feature decisions Support for Reuse/Polymorphism Error handling Dynamic vs static, implicit vs explicit Meta programming Functional programming Course Format • Sage on stage vs Guide on side... ▫ Group discussions are not intended to return you to kindergarten. Some questions are just at the factual level, but some require you to go to stackoverflow etc. to compare, contrast, etc. ▫ Stackoverflow discussions can actually be richer than textbook definitions, because they are written by professionals who have spent a lot of time reflecting. Lifelong learning. ▫ Tests tend to focus less on code, more on language concepts. Categories of Programming Languages • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_program ming_languages_by_type With a partner: • What categories include Java? • What categories include Ruby? • Read through all the categories. Which ones are familiar? Which have you never heard of? Language Evaluation Criteria What criteria would you use to evaluate/choose a language? Brainstorm – don’t look ahead! Language Evaluation Criteria • Writability: how easy is it to write a program? • Readability: how easy is it to read a program? • Reliability: does it include features that help to produce more reliable software? • Cost: what’s the ultimate cost? Categories proposed by Sebesta Writeable and Readable • • • • • • • Simplicity Support for abstraction Control statements Data types Syntax Orthogonality Expressivity What aspects of a language might make it easier to read than write (or vice versa)? Orthogonality – A relatively small set of primitive constructs can be combined in a relatively small number of ways – Every possible combination is legal – Changing one thing has no effect on another • As stated by Michael Scott: ▫ Orthogonality means that features can be used in any combination, the combinations all make sense, and the meaning of a given feature is consistent regardless of other features with which it is combined. 261 example: arrays Java: no default params Evaluation Criteria: Reliability • Type checking ▫ Testing for type errors • Exception handling ▫ Intercept run-time errors and take corrective measures • Aliasing ▫ Presence of two or more distinct referencing methods for the same memory location • Readability and writability ▫ A language that does not support “natural” ways of expressing an algorithm will necessarily use “unnatural” approaches, and hence reduced reliability 1-10 Evaluation Criteria: Cost • Training programmers to use language • Writing programs (closeness to particular applications) • Compiling programs • Executing programs • Language implementation system: availability of free compilers (Ada vs Java) • Reliability: poor reliability leads to high costs • Maintaining programs How does this relate to programming languages? 1-11 Evaluation Criteria: Others • Portability ▫ The ease with which programs can be moved from one implementation to another • Generality ▫ The applicability to a wide range of applications • Well-definedness ▫ The completeness and precision of the language’s official definition Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-12 Language Design Trade-Offs • Reliability vs. cost of execution ▫ Conflicting criteria ▫ Example: Java demands all references to array elements be checked for proper indexing but that leads to increased execution costs • Readability vs. writability ▫ Another conflicting criteria ▫ Example: APL provides many powerful operators (and a large number of new symbols), allowing complex computations to be written in a compact program but at the cost of poor readability • Writability (flexibility) vs. reliability ▫ Another conflicting criteria ▫ Example: C++ pointers are powerful and very flexible but not reliably used. Not included in Java. Expressivity Find something to share with the class – turn in for attendance points • http://babel.ls.fi.upm.es/~jjmoreno/expre.html • http://redmonk.com/dberkholz/2013/03/25/programming-languagesranked-by-expressiveness/ • http://stackoverflow.com/questions/638881/what-does-expressive-meanwhen-referring-to-programming-languages • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expressive_power • http://mt4.radified.com/2009/08/expressive-power-computerprogramming-language-literature.html • http://gafter.blogspot.com/2007/03/on-expressive-power-ofprogramming.html 1-14 Evaluation Criteria: the Players • Language implementors: concerned with difficulty of implementing constructs and features • Language users: worried about writability first, readability later • Language designers: likely to emphasize elegance and ability to attract widespread use ▫ (on your own: http://www.paulgraham.com/popular.html) Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-15 Influences on Language Design • Computer Architecture • Programming Methodologies Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Computer Architecture Influence • Well-known computer architecture: Von Neumann • Imperative languages, most dominant, because of von Neumann computers ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ Data and programs stored in memory Memory is separate from CPU Instructions and data are piped from memory to CPU Basis for imperative languages Variables model memory cells Assignment statements model piping Iteration is efficient John Von Neuman (1903-1957). Mathematician, influential in set theory, quantum mechanics, game theory, self-replicating cellular automata, pseudo-random numbers and more. On faculty of Princeton Institute for Advanced Studies with Einstein and Godel. VonNeumann architecture based on ENIAC. Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-17 Programming Methodologies Influences • 1950s and early 1960s: Simple applications; worry about machine efficiency • Late 1960s: People efficiency became important; readability, better control structures ▫ structured programming ▫ top-down design and step-wise refinement • Late 1970s: Process-oriented to data-oriented ▫ data abstraction • Middle 1980s: Object-oriented programming ▫ Data abstraction + inheritance + polymorphism • Current ▫ Functional programming, concurrency 1-18 Language Categories • Imperative/Procedural ▫ Central features are variables, assignment statements, and iteration ▫ Examples: C, Pascal, scripting languages such as Perl • Functional ▫ Main means of making computations is by applying functions to given parameters ▫ Examples: LISP, Scheme, Haskell • Logic ▫ Rule-based (rules are specified in no particular order) ▫ Example: Prolog, SQL • Object-oriented ▫ Data abstraction, inheritance, late binding ▫ Examples: Java, C++, C# • Markup ▫ New; not a programming language per se, but used to specify the layout of information in Web documents ▫ Examples: XHTML, XML What about CSS? More Language Categories • Stack Based ▫ Stack is central feature ▫ Examples: PostScript, Forth • Prototype ▫ Use the object, not the class, as the basis for object definition and inheritance ▫ Examples: Io, Lua, Self, JavaScript More info for you to explore on your own 1-21 Implementation Methods • Compilation • Pure Interpretation • Hybrid Implementation Systems Think like a compiler • Scanner (lexical analyzer): identifies the tokens of a program statement • Parser (syntax analyzer): determines whether the statement is valid, based on the language definition/grammar ▫ int count = 20; Tokens: Grammar: Based on BNF int count = 20 ; The Compilation Process Compilation process has several phases: • lexical analysis: converts characters in the source program into lexical units • syntax analysis: transforms lexical units into parse trees which represent the syntactic structure of program • Semantics analysis: generate intermediate code • code generation: machine code is generated Slow translation, fast execution Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Additional Compilation Terminologies • Load module (executable image): the user and system code together • Linking and loading: the process of collecting system program and linking them to user program