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Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: term-rewriting, functional, procedural, array |
---|---|
Designed by | Stephen Wolfram |
Developer | Wolfram Research |
First appeared | 1988 |
Stable release | 12.2[1]
/ December 16, 2020 |
Typing discipline | Dynamic, strong |
OS | Cross-platform |
License | Proprietary (available at no-cost for some platforms)[2] |
Filename extensions | .nb, .m, .wl |
Website | www |
Major implementations | |
Mathematica, Wolfram|One, Mathics, Expreduce, MockMMA, WolframAlpha | |
Influenced by | |
Influenced | |
The Wolfram Language (/ˈwʊlfrəm/ WUUL-frəm) is a general multi-paradigm programming language[8] developed by Wolfram Research. It emphasizes symbolic computation, functional programming, and rule-based programming[9] and can employ arbitrary structures and data.[9] It is the programming language of the mathematical symbolic computation program Mathematica.[10]
The Wolfram Language was a part of the initial version of Mathematica in 1988.[11]
Symbolic aspects of the engine make it a computer algebra system. The language can perform integration, differentiation, matrix manipulations, and solve differential equations using a set of rules. Also in 1988 was the notebook model and the ability to embed sound and images, according to Theodore Gray's patent.[12]
An online frontend for the language, WolframAlpha, was released in 2009. Wolfram implemented this website by translating natural language statements into Wolfram-language queries that link to its database. The work leading to Wolfram Alpha also means that Wolfram's implementation of the language now has built-in access to a knowledge-base as well as natural language processing functions.
Wolfram also added features for more complex tasks, such as 3D modeling.[13]
A name was finally adopted for the language in 2013, as Wolfram Research decided to make a version of the language engine free for Raspberry Pi users, and they needed to come up with a name for it.[14] It was included in the recommended software bundle that the Raspberry Pi Foundation provides for beginners, which caused some controversy due to the Wolfram language's proprietary nature.[15] Plans to port the Wolfram language to the Intel Edison were announced after the board's introduction at CES 2014 but was never released.[16] In 2019, a link was added to make Wolfram libraries compatible with the Unity game engine, giving game developers access to the language's high level functions.[17][18]
The Wolfram Language syntax is overall similar to the M-expression of 1960s LISP, with support for infix operators and "function-notation" function calls.
The Wolfram language writes basic arithmetic expressions using infix operators.
(* This is a comment. *)
4 + 3
(* = 7 *)
1 + 2 * (3 + 4)
(* = 15 *)
(* Note that Multiplication can be omitted: 1 + 2 (3 + 4) *)
(* Divisions return rational numbers: *)
3 / 2
(* = 3/2 *)
Function calls are denoted with square brackets:
Sin[Pi]
(* = 0 *)
(* This is the function to convert rationals to floating points: *)
N[3 / 2]
(* = 1.5 *)
Lists are enclosed in curly brackets:
Oddlist={1,3,5}
(* = {1,3,5} *)
The language may deviate from the M-expression paradigm when an alternative, more human-friendly way of showing an expression is available:
TeXForm
for typeset expressions and InputForm
for language input.@
and the postfix expression //
.'
.A FullForm
formatter desugars the input:[19]
FullForm[1+2]
(* = Plus[1, 2] *)
Currying is supported.
Functions in the Wolfram Language are basically a case of simple patterns for replacement:
F[x_] := x ^ 0
The :=
is a "SetDelayed operator", so that the x is not immediately looked for. x_
is syntax sugar for Pattern[x, Blank[]]
, i.e. a "blank" for any value to replace x in the rest of the evaluation.
An iteration of bubble sort is expressed as:
sortRule := {x___,y_,z_,k___} /; y>z -> {x,z,y,k}
(* Rule[Condition[List[PatternSequence[x, BlankNullSequence[]], Pattern[y, Blank[]], Pattern[z, Blank[]], PatternSequence[k, BlankNullSequence[]]], Greater[y, z]], List[x, z, y, k]] *)
The /;
operator is "condition", so that the rule only applies when y>z
. The three underscores are a syntax for a BlankNullSequence[]
, for a sequence that can be null.
A ReplaceRepeated //.
operator can be used to apply this rule repeatedly, until no more change happens:
{ 9, 5, 3, 1, 2, 4 } //. sortRule
(* = ReplaceRepeated[{ 9, 5, 3, 1, 2, 4 }, sortRule] *)
(* = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 9} *)
The pattern matching system also easily gives rise to rule-based integration and derivation. The following are excerpts from the Rubi package of rules:[20]
(* Reciprocal rule *)
Int[1/x_,x_Symbol] :=
Log[x];
(* Power rule *)
Int[x_^m_.,x_Symbol] :=
x^(m+1)/(m+1) /;
FreeQ[m,x] && NeQ[m,-1]
The official, and reference, implementation of the Wolfram Language lies in Mathematica and associated online services. These are closed source.[21] Wolfram Research has, however, released a C++ parser of the language under the open source MIT License.[22] The reference book is open access.[23]
In the over three-decade-long existence of the Wolfram language, a number of open source third party implementations have also been developed. Richard Fateman's MockMMA from 1991 is of historical note. Modern ones still being maintained as of April 2020[update] include Symja in Java, expreduce in Golang, and the SymPy-based Mathics.[24] These implementations focus on the core language and the computer algebra system that it implies, not on the online "knowledgebase" features of Wolfram.
In 2019,[25] Wolfram Research released a freeware Wolfram Engine, to be used as a programming library in non-commercial software.[26]
The language was officially named in June 2013 although, as the backend of the computing system Mathematica, it has been in use in various forms for over 30 years since Mathematica's initial release.[10][27]
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 18:21:55
Source: Wikipedia.org