Why did Prolog lose steam? | Mark J. Nelsonhttps://www.kmjn.org/notes/prolog_lost_steam.html
, asks: of the major programming traditions—imperative, functional, object-oriented, and logic—why did the logic-programming one, exemplified by Prolog, more or less d
Its declarative lunch was partly eaten
Command Line Interface Guidelineshttps://clig.dev/
talking about ways of programming computers that offer the power of the CLI and that transcend writing software in text files. There is a belief among Kay’s disciples that we need
An open-source guide to help you write better command-line programs, taking traditional UNIX principles and updating them for the modern day.
The Rule of Least Powerhttps://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/leastPower.html
many ways in which a programming language may exhibit power or complexity, nor to suggest that all such power necessarily interferes with information reuse. Rather, this finding o
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