Alef (programming language)
Appearance
Designed by | Phil Winterbottom |
---|---|
OS | Plan 9 from Bell Labs |
Influenced by | |
Newsqueak | |
Influenced | |
Limbo, Rust |
The Alef programming language was designed as part of the Plan 9 operating system by Phil Winterbottom of Bell Labs.
In a February 2000 slideshow, Rob Pike noted: "…although Alef was a fruitful language, it proved too difficult to maintain a variant language across multiple architectures, so we took what we learned from it and built the thread library for C."
Example
This example was taken from Alef Language Reference Manual. The piece illustrates the use of tuple data type.
(int, byte*, byte)
func()
{
return (10, "hello", ’c’);
}
void
main()
{
int a;
byte* str;
byte c;
(a, str, c) = func();
}
See also
- Limbo, a direct successor of Alef, the most commonly used language in the Inferno operating system
- Plan 9 from Bell Labs, the original environment where Alef was developed
References
- Winterbottom, Phil (1995). "Alef Language Reference Manual". Plan 9 Programmer's Manual: Volume Two. Murray Hill: AT&T.
{{cite book}}
: External link in
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|chapterurl=
ignored (|chapter-url=
suggested) (help) - Flandrena, Bob (1995). "Alef Users' Guide". Plan 9 Programmer's Manual: Volume Two. Murray Hill: AT&T.
{{cite book}}
: External link in
(help); Unknown parameter|chapterurl=
|chapterurl=
ignored (|chapter-url=
suggested) (help) - Phil Winterbottom (1992-10-20). "Plan9 VM". Newsgroup: comp.os.research. 1c1denINN441@darkstar.UCSC.EDU.
- TLC Hackers' Hall of Fame