PICCOLA---a small composition language
Formal methods for distributed processing
Component-Based Programming of Distributed Applications
Advances in Distributed Systems, Advanced Distributed Computing: From Algorithms to Systems
Supporting incremental and experimental software evolution by runtime method transformations
Science of Computer Programming - Special issue on program transformation
OOPSLA '05 Proceedings of the 20th annual ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object-oriented programming, systems, languages, and applications
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI)
A history of Haskell: being lazy with class
Proceedings of the third ACM SIGPLAN conference on History of programming languages
Lingua Franca: an IDL for structural subtyping distributed object systems
COOTS'95 Proceedings of the USENIX Conference on Object-Oriented Technologies on USENIX Conference on Object-Oriented Technologies (COOTS)
OMeta: an object-oriented language for pattern matching
Proceedings of the 2007 symposium on Dynamic languages
An experimental analysis of the impact of accuracy degradation in SVM classification
International Journal of Computational Intelligence Studies
Brief communication: Computation of mutual information from Hidden Markov Models
Computational Biology and Chemistry
IPDPS'06 Proceedings of the 20th international conference on Parallel and distributed processing
A rule markup language and its application to UML
ISoLA'04 Proceedings of the First international conference on Leveraging Applications of Formal Methods
An intensional programming approach to multi-agent coordination in a distributed network of agents
DALT'05 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies
SC'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Software Composition
Polymorphic identifiers: uniform resource access in objective-smalltalk
Proceedings of the 9th symposium on Dynamic languages
A model for profile management applied to ubiquitous learning environments
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Python is a simple, yet powerful, interpreted programming language that bridges the gap between C and shell programming, and is thus ideally suited for ``throw-away programming'''' and rapid prototyping. Its syntax is put together from constructs borrowed from a variety of other languages; most prominent are influences from ABC, C, Modula-3 and Icon. The Python interpreter is easily extended with new functions and data types implemented in C. Python is also suitable as an extension language for highly customizable C applications such as editors or window managers. Python is available for various operating systems, amongst which several flavors of UNIX (including Linux), the Apple Macintosh O.S., MS-DOS, MS-Windows 3.1, Windows NT, and OS/2. This reference manual describes the syntax and ``core semantics'''' of the language. It is terse, but attempts to be exact and complete. The semantics of non-essential built-in object types and of the built-in functions and modules are described in the Python Library Reference. For an informal introduction to the language, see the Python Tutorial.