Little b (programming language)

Little b
Paradigm functional
Designed by Aneil Mallavarapu
Developer Harvard Medical School Department of Systems Biology
First appeared 2004
Stable release 1.6.0 / September 6, 2008 (2008-09-06)
Typing discipline dynamic, strong
Website www.littleb.org
Major implementations
Linux, Mac OS X, Windows
Influenced by
Lisp

Little b is a domain-specific programming language, more specifically, a modeling language, designed to build modular mathematical models of biological systems. It was designed and authored by Aneil Mallavarapu. Little b is being developed in the Virtual Cell Program at Harvard Medical School, headed by mathematician Jeremy Gunawardena.

This language is based on Lisp and is meant to allow modular programming to model biological systems. It will allow more flexibility to facilitate rapid change that is required to accurately capture complex biological systems.

The language draws on techniques from artificial intelligence and symbolic mathematics, and provides syntactic conveniences derived from object-oriented languages. The language was originally denoted with a lowercase b (distinguishing it from B, the predecessor to the widely used C programming language, but the name was eventually changed to "little b" to avoid confusion and to pay homage to Smalltalk, the first object-oriented programming language.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, August 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.