Differences between version 11 and predecessor to the previous major change of ML.
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| Newer page: | version 11 | Last edited on Sunday, February 16, 2003 12:57:01 am | by PerryLorier | Revert |
| Older page: | version 10 | Last edited on Saturday, February 15, 2003 11:58:12 pm | by GianPerrone | Revert |
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
''(I'm still working on this, so some parts will still be gibberish. --GlynWebster)'' %%%
-''(And I may be wandering off into little tutorials where I don't need to. What do you think? --GlynWebster)''
+''(And I may be wandering off into little tutorials where I don't need to. What do you think? --GlynWebster)''%%%
+''(Tutorial's are good, this is supposed to be an interesting place to go and learn stuff from, however, not all these concepts are exclusively ML, for instance StaticallyTyped, HigherOrder, PolyMorphic, Functional, Standardi__s__edLanguage, are all attributes of other programming languages too, breaking these out into their own pages would be educational no? -- PerryLorier
)''
!!!ML in one paragraph, with buzzwords:
ML is a family of statically typed[1], higher-order[2], polymorphic[3], strict[4] functional programming languages with a higher-order module system[5]. ML is very good general purpose programming language[6] with a strength in pattern matching[7]. ML can
