| Rishiyur S. Nikhil, Arvind, James E. Hicks, Shail Aditya, Lennart Augustsson, Jan-Willem Maessen, and Y. Zhou. pH language reference manual, version 1.0. Technical Report CSGMemo -369, Massachussets Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Computer Science, 1995. |
....structures. As an additional advantage of laziness, only those fragments of the table are constructed that are actually needed to accept the input at hand. Thus, we avoid overly high startup costs for short inputs, which would be incurred in non strict, but eager ( lenient) languages like pH [6]. In summary, the central contributions are the following: A new technique for on line generation of state transition tables from regular expressions in a lazy functional language. A combinator library for specifying lexical analysers, including often required nonregular features. ....
Rishiyur S. Nikhil, Arvind, James E. Hicks, Shail Aditya, Lennart Augustsson, Jan-Willem Maessen, and Y. Zhou. pH language reference manual, version 1.0. Technical Report CSGMemo -369, Massachussets Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Computer Science, 1995.
....in FIDIL resemble data fields also in other respects, for instance they can have a wider variety of shapes than traditional array bounds. Examples of functional data parallel and array languages are Connection Machine Lisp [22] Id [3] Sisal [4] NESL [2] Data Parallel Haskell [9] and pH [15]. These languages are intended for direct parallel implementation whereas Data Field Haskell targets the specification phase. Haskell itself [17] has also been suggested for data parallel programming [16] FISh [11] is an imperative array language, which shares some features with Data Field ....
R. S. Nikhil, Arvind, J. E. Hicks, S. Aditya, L. Augustsson, J.-W. Maessen, and Y. Zhou. pH language reference manual, version 1.0. Technical Report CSG-Memo-369, Massachussets Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Computer Science, Jan. 1995.
....in FIDIL resemble data fields also in other respects, for instance they can have a wider variety of shapes than traditional array bounds. Examples of functional data parallel and array languages are Connection Machine Lisp [28] Id [4] Sisal [6] NESL [2] Data Parallel Haskell [10] and pH [21]. These languages are intended for direct parallel implementation whereas Data Field Haskell targets collection oriented programming in general, with more emphasis on expressiveness than efficiency. Haskell itself [23] is to some extent collection oriented through its set of collective list ....
Rishiyur S. Nikhil, Arvind, James E. Hicks, Shail Aditya, Lennart Augustsson, JanWillem Maessen, and Y. Zhou. pH language reference manual, version 1.0. Technical Report CSG-Memo-369, Massachussets Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Computer Science, January 1995.
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Rishiyur S. Nikhil, Arvind, James E. Hicks, Shail Aditya, Lennart Augustsson, Jan-Willem Maessen, and Y. Zhou. pH language reference manual, version 1.0. Technical Report CSG-Memo-369, Massachussets Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Computer Science, 1995.
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