Higher-order programming: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Jonthnw (talk | contribs)
Wolfram Language formerly known as Mathematica, also known as M
Jonthnw (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Line 3:
For example, in higher-order programming, one can pass [[function (programming)|functions]] as arguments to other functions and functions can be the return value of other functions (such as in [[macro (computer science)|macros]] or for [[interpreter (computing)|interpreting]]). This style of programming is mostly used in [[functional programming]], but it can also be very useful in [[object-oriented programming]]. A slightly different interpretation of higher-order programming in the context of object-oriented programming are [[higher order message]]s, which let messages have other messages as arguments, rather than functions.
 
Prominent examples of languages supporting this are [[Wolfram LanguageWolfram_Language (programming language)|Wolfram_LanguageWolfram Language]], [[C Sharp (programming language)|C#]], [[Java (programming language)|Java]], [[ECMAScript]] ([[ActionScript]], [[JavaScript]], [[JScript]]), [[F Sharp (programming language)|F#]], [[Haskell (programming language)|Haskell]], [[Lisp (programming language)|Lisp]] ([[Common Lisp]], [[Scheme (programming language)|Scheme]], [[Clojure]], others), [[Lua (programming language)|Lua]], [[Oz (programming language)|Oz]], [[Perl]], [[Prolog]],<ref name=Naish1996>{{Cite report
| title = Higher-order logic programming in Prolog
| url = http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.35.4505