Objective Caml

from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
Objective CAML

   <language> (Originally "CAML" - Categorical Abstract Machine
   Language) A version of {ML} by G. Huet, G. Cousineau, Ascander
   Suarez, Pierre Weis, Michel Mauny and others of {INRIA}.  CAML
   is intermediate between {LCF ML} and {SML} [in what sense?].
   It has {first-class} functions, {static type inference} with
   {polymorphic} types, user-defined {variant types} and {product
   types}, and {pattern matching}.  It is built on a proprietary
   run-time system.

   The CAML V3.1 implementation added {lazy} and {mutable} data
   structures, a "{grammar}" mechanism for interfacing with the
   {Yacc} {parser generator}, {pretty-printing} tools,
   high-performance {arbitrary-precision} arithmetic, and a
   complete library.

   in 1990 Xavier Leroy and Damien Doligez designed a new
   implementation called {CAML Light}, freeing the previous
   implementation from too many experimental high-level features,
   and more importantly, from the old Le_Lisp back-end.

   Following the addition of a {native-code} compiler and a
   powerful {module} system in 1995 and of the {object} and
   {class} layer in 1996, the project's name was changed to
   Objective CAML.  In 2000, Jacques Garrigue added labeled and
   optional arguments and anonymous variants.

   Objective CAML Home (http://ocaml.org/).

   Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.ml.

   ["The CAML Reference Manual", P. Weis et al, TR INRIA-ENS,
   1989].

   (2002-05-21)
    

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