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5 Programming Languages Marked for Death by Jeff Cogswell Oct 9, 2014 10 min read Update: So how did we do with these predictions? Check out our March 2016 article that breaks down which of the following languages continue to retain market-share... and which are, indeed, imploding. As developers embrace new programming languages, older languages can go one of two ways: stay in use, despite fading
With the release of version 5.0, PLT Scheme was renamed to Racket. (Why?) PLT will continue to maintain and grow Racket as it did for PLT Scheme for 15 years. Our commitment to this product hasn't changed and we will continue to work with all of our users on the usefulness of our programming language and IDE. This web page is maintained for historical reasons only. For all future releases, please
Groovy WikiGroovy... is an agile and dynamic language for the Java Virtual Machine builds upon the strengths of Java but has additional power features inspired by languages like Python, Ruby and Smalltalk makes modern programming features available to Java developers with almost-zero learning curve supports Domain-Specific Languages and other compact syntax so your code becomes easy to read and ma
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