General-purpose language

A general-purpose language is a computer language that is broadly applicable across application domains, and lacks specialized features for a particular domain. This is in contrast to a domain-specific language (DSL), which is specialized to a particular application domain. The line is not always sharp, as a language may have specialized features for a particular domain but be applicable more broadly, or conversely may in principle be capable of broad application but in practice used primarily for a specific domain.[1]

General-purpose languages are further subdivided by the kind of language, and include:

References

  1. "Definition of general-purpose language". PCMag. Retrieved April 6, 2020. A programming language that is used to solve a wide variety of problems. Languages such as C, C++ and Java are examples. Contrast with special-purpose language. See general purpose.
  2. John Ousterhout (2008). "Markup Languages: XML, HTML, XHTML". stanford.edu. Retrieved April 6, 2020.
  3. Mallet, Frédéric (2008). "Clock constraint specification language: specifying clock constraints with UML/MARTE" (PDF). Innovations in Systems and Software Engineering. 4 (3): 309–314. doi:10.1007/s11334-008-0055-2. S2CID 10895550.
  4. "Programming Languages Through the Years". The Software Guild. July 30, 2015. Retrieved April 6, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.