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General-purpose language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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

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  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. Archived from the original on February 7, 2021. Retrieved April 6, 2020.
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