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Objective Caml, also known as OCaml or O'Caml for short, is an advanced programming language that is part of the ML family. It is developed and distributed as Open-source by INRIA. Ocaml was created in 1996 as a successor to Caml Light. Its authors include Xavier Leroy, Jerome Vouillon and Damien Doligez. CAML originally stood for Categorical Abstract Machine Language. OCaml has not been based on this abstract machine for a long time. OCaml shares the functional and imperative features of ML, but contains object-oriented concepts and some minor syntax differences. FeaturesPerformance distinguishes OCaml from other languages in the ML family. The runtime system was designed to be fast, efficient, and rather frugal in memory. Ocaml provides a bytecode compiler, a script interpreter or toplevel evaluation loop, and an optimizing native code compiler. The code generated by the native code compiler is typically comparable to C/C++ in efficiency. See for instance The Computer Language Shootout Benchmarks (http://shootout.alioth.debian.org/). Powerful features of the language include a static type system, type inference, parametric polymorphism, tail recursion, pattern matching, first class lexical closures, functors (parametric modules), exception handling, and incremental generational automatic garbage collection. It also has a quite concise syntax. The object system provides for multiple inheritance, object construction directly (by specifying methods for a unique object) or from classes, and structural subtyping (objects are of compatible types if their methods are compatible, regardless of what was inherited from what). OCaml features are pragmatically balanced between expressivity and new features
on the one side and ease of interfacing with existing systems and libraries and
efficiency on the other side. Ocaml contains support for familiar functions
such as The OCaml distribution includes a powerful preprocessor (which permits syntactical extensions), a debugger (which includes the ability to step backwards in time when investigating an error), a documentation generator, a profiler, and numerous general purpose libraries. The compiler is available for a range of platforms, including Unix, Windows, and Macintosh, with native code generation for all major architectures (IA32, PowerPC, AMD64, Sparc, IA64, Alpha, HP/PA, MIPS, StrongARM), thus providing good portability. UsesOCaml is used in a wide range of applications, including theorem proving and computer program analysis. It is also used in applications such as MLDonkey (a popular P2P program supporting multiple networks) and the Unison File Synchronizer (http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/). Programs implemented in Ocaml have won prizes several times in the ICFP programming contest. Ocaml is used as an introductory language in many universities, including EPITA, École Normale Supérieure, Caltech, Brown University, and the University of Pisa. See also
External links
Code examplesHello Worldlet _ = print_endline "Hello world!" 99 Bottles of Beeropen Printf
let bottles = function
| 0 -> "no more bottles of beer"
| 1 -> "1 bottle of beer"
| n -> sprintf "%d bottles of beer" n
let verse n =
let current = bottles n and next = bottles (n - 1) in
let first_line = sprintf "%s on the wall, %s.\n" current current in
let second_line = "Take one down, pass it around,\n" in
let third_line = sprintf "and there's %s on the wall!\n" next in
first_line ^ second_line ^ third_line
let sing_song () =
for n = 99 downto 1 do
print_endline (verse n)
done;;
sing_song ()
de:Objective CAML es:Ocaml fr:Objective Caml ja:OCaml it:Objective_Caml pl:Ocaml ru:OCaml tr:Ocaml
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