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{{short description|Style of computer programming}}
In [[computer science]], '''
== Historical movement ==
The first paper usually<ref name="Standish1975">Standish, Thomas A., "[https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/7f11/082b409647e8d50dadd3a369a10278b5890f.pdf Extensibility in Programming Language Design]", ''SIGPLAN Notices'' 10 no. 7 (July 1975), pp. 18–21.</ref><ref name="Sammet1969">Sammet, Jean E., ''Programming Languages: History and Fundamentals'', Prentice-Hall, 1969, section III.7.2</ref> associated with the extensible programming language movement is
=== Character of the historical movement ===
As typically envisioned, an extensible
The most prominent language-extension technique used in the movement was macro definition.
<blockquote>any programming language in which programs and data are essentially interchangeable can be regarded as an extendible [sic] language.
At the 1969 conference, [[Simula]] was presented as an extensible
Standish described three classes of language extension, which he
* [[Paraphrase]] defines a facility by showing how to exchange it for something
* Orthophrase adds features to a language that could not be achieved using the base language, such as adding an
* Metaphrase modifies the interpretation rules used for pre-existing expressions.
▲* Orthophrase adds features to a language that could not be achieved using the base language, such as adding an i/o system to a base language that previously had no i/o primitives. Extensions must be understood as orthophrase ''relative'' to some given base language, since a feature not defined in terms of the base language must be defined in terms of some other language. Orthophrase corresponds to the modern notion of [[plug-in (computing)|plug-ins]].
▲* Metaphrase modifies the interpretation rules used for pre-existing expressions. It corresponds to the modern notion of [[Reflection (computer science)|reflection]].
=== Death of the historical movement ===
Standish attributed the failure of the extensibility movement to the difficulty of programming successive extensions.
Despite the earlier presentation of Simula as extensible, by 1975, Standish's survey does not seem in practice to have included the newer abstraction-based technologies (though he used a very general definition of extensibility that technically could have included them).
== Modern movement ==
In the modern sense, a system that supports extensible programming will provide ''all'' of the features described below{{Citation needed|reason=Reliable source needed for this definition|date=October 2017}}.
=== Extensible syntax ===
{{category see also
This simply means that the source language(s) to be compiled must not be closed, fixed, or static.
=== Extensible compiler ===
In extensible programming, a compiler is not a monolithic program that converts source code input into binary executable output. The compiler itself must be extensible to the point that it is really a collection of plugins that assist with the translation of source language input into ''anything''. For example, an extensible compiler will support the generation of object code, code documentation, re-formatted source code, or any other desired output. The architecture of the compiler must permit its users to "get inside" the compilation process and provide alternative processing tasks at every reasonable step in the compilation process.
For just the task of translating source code into something that can be executed on a computer, an extensible compiler should:
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=== Source language debugging support ===
Extensible programming systems must support the debugging of programs using the constructs of the original source language regardless of the extensions or transformation the program has undergone in order to make it executable. Most notably, it cannot be assumed that the only way to display runtime data is in ''structures'' or ''arrays''. The debugger, or more correctly 'program inspector', must permit the display of runtime data in forms suitable to the source language. For example, if the language supports a data structure for a [[business process]] or [[work flow]], it must be possible for the debugger to display that data structure as a [[fishbone chart]] or other form provided by a plugin.
==Examples==
* [[Camlp4]]
*
* [[Seed7]]
* [[Red (programming language)]]▼
* [[Rebol]]
** [[
* [[
▲* [[OpenC++]]
* OpenC++
* [[XL (programming language)]]▼
* [[
* [[XML]]
* [[Scheme (programming language)]]▼
* [[
* [[
* [[
** [[Racket (programming language)|Racket]]
▲** [[Scheme (programming language)|Scheme]]
* [[PL/I]]
* [[Smalltalk]]
== See also ==
* [[:Category:Extensible syntax programming languages]]▼
* [[Adaptive grammar]]
* [[Concept programming]]
* [[Dialecting]]
* [[Grammar-oriented programming]]
* [[Language-oriented programming]]
* [[Homoiconicity]]
== References ==
{{
== External links ==
=== General ===
# [https://web.archive.org/web/20050209071400/http://www.acmqueue.com/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=247&page=1 Greg Wilson's Article in ACM Queue]
# [http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/01/18/2157249&from=rss Slashdot Discussion]
# [http://www.cas.mcmaster.ca/sqrl/papers/SQRLreport47.pdf Modern Extensible Languages] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612014339/http://www.cas.mcmaster.ca/sqrl/papers/SQRLreport47.pdf |date=2011-06-12}} – A paper from [[Daniel Zingaro]]
=== Tools ===
# [http://www.meta-language.net/ MetaL]
# [
# [http://www.jetbrains.com/mps/ MPS]
===
# [https://openzz.sourceforge.net/ OpenZz]
# [http://cs.nyu.edu/rgrimm/xtc/ xtc
# [https://github.com/pannous/english-script English-script]
# [
# [https://web.archive.org/web/20050817205802/http://boo.codehaus.org/Syntactic+Macros Boo Syntactic Macros]
# [https://web.archive.org/web/20061022071450/http://suif.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Intermediate Format compiler]
# [
# [https://github.com/chrisseaton/katahdin Katahdin] – a language with syntax and semantics that are mutable at runtime
# [http://www.pi-programming.org/What.html π] – a language with extensible syntax, implemented using an [[Earley parser]]
{{Programming
{{Types of programming languages}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Extensible Programming}}
[[Category:Programming paradigms]]
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