List of programming languages by type
This is a list of notable programming languages, grouped by notable language attribute. As a language can have multiple attributes, the same language can be in multiple groupings.
Agent-oriented programming languages
Agent-oriented programming allows the developer to build, extend and use software agents, which are abstractions of objects that can message other agents.Array languages
Array programming languages generalize operations on scalars to apply transparently to vectors, matrices, and higher-dimensional arrays.- A+
- Ada
- Analytica
- APL
- Chapel
- Dartmouth BASIC
- Fortran
- FreeMat
- GAUSS
- Interactive Data Language
- J
- Julia
- K
- MATLAB
- Octave
- PL/I
- Q
- R
- Raku
- S
- Scilab
- S-Lang
- SequenceL
- Speakeasy
- Wolfram Mathematica
- X10
- ZPL
Aspect-oriented programming languages
Aspect-oriented programming enables developers to add new functionality to code, known as "advice", without modifying that code itself; rather, it uses a pointcut to implement the advice into code blocks.Assembly languages
Assembly languages directly correspond to a machine language, so machine code instructions appear in a form understandable by humans, although there may not be a one-to-one mapping between an individual statement and an individual instruction. Assembly languages let programmers use symbolic addresses, which the assembler converts to absolute or relocatable addresses. Most assemblers also support macros and symbolic constants.Authoring languages
An authoring language is a programming language designed for use by a non-computer expert to easily create tutorials, websites, and other interactive computer programs.Command-line interface languages
Command-line interface languages are also called batch languages or job control languages. Examples:- 4DOS
- 4OS2
- Batch files for DOS and Windows
- * COMMAND.COM command language for DOS and pre-Windows NT Windows
- * cmd.exe command language for Windows NT
- sh and compatibles
- * bash
- * ksh
- CLIST
- CMS EXEC
- csh and compatibles
- * tcsh
- * C shell">C (programming language)">C shell
- DIGITAL Command Language CLI for OpenVMS
- EXEC 2
- Expect
- fish
- Nushell
- PowerShell
- rc
- Rexx
- TACL (programming language)
- zsh
Compiled languages
These are languages typically processed by compilers, though theoretically any language can be compiled or interpreted.- ArkTS
- ActionScript
- Ada
- ALGOL 58
- * JOVIAL
- * NELIAC
- ALGOL 60
- * SMALL a Machine ALGOL
- ALGOL 68
- Ballerina→ bytecode runtime
- BASIC
- BCPL
- C
- C++
- C#
- Ceylon
- CHILL
- CLIPPER 5.3
- CLEO for Leo computers
- Clojure
- COBOL
- Cobra
- Common Lisp
- Crystal
- Curl
- D
- DASL→Java, JS, JSP, Flex.war
- Delphi
- DIBOL
- Dylan
- Eiffel
- * Sather
- * Ubercode
- Elm
- Emacs Lisp
- Emerald
- Erlang
- Factor
- Fortran
- GAUSS
- Go
- Gosu
- Groovy
- Haskell
- Harbour
- HolyC
- Inform
- Java
- JOVIAL
- Julia
- Kotlin
- LabVIEW
- Mercury
- Mesa
- Nemerle
- Nim
- Objective-C
- P
- Pascal
- PL/I
- Plus
- Pony
- Python
- RPG
- Red
- Rust
- Scala
- Scheme
- SequenceL – purely [|functional], parallelizing and race-free
- Simula
- Smalltalk platform independent VM bytecode
- Swift
- ML
- * Standard ML
- ** Alice
- * OCaml
- * F#
- Turing
- V (Vlang)
- Vala
- Visual Basic
- Visual FoxPro
- Visual Prolog
- Xojo
- Zig
Concatenative programming languages
A concatenative programming language is a point-free computer programming language in which all expressions denote functions, and the juxtaposition of expressions denotes function composition.Concurrent languages
Message passing languages provide language constructs for concurrency. The predominant paradigm for concurrency in mainstream languages such as Java is shared memory concurrency. Concurrent languages that make use of message passing have generally been inspired by process calculi such as communicating sequential processes or the π-calculus.- Ada – multi-purpose language
- Alef – concurrent language with threads and message passing, used for systems programming in early versions of Plan 9 from Bell Labs
- Ateji PX – an extension of the Java language for parallelism
- Ballerina – a language designed for implementing and orchestrating micro-services. Provides a message based parallel-first concurrency model.
- C++
- ChucK – domain specific programming language for audio, precise control over concurrency and timing
- Cilk – a concurrent C
- Cω – C Omega, a research language extending C#, uses asynchronous communication
- Clojure – a dialect of Lisp for the Java virtual machine
- Chapel
- Co-array Fortran
- Concurrent Pascal
- Curry
- E – uses promises, ensures deadlocks cannot occur
- Eiffel
- Elixir
- Emerald – uses threads and monitors
- Erlang – uses asynchronous message passing with nothing shared
- Gambit Scheme – using the Termite library
- Gleam
- Go
- Haskell – supports concurrent, distributed, and parallel programming across multiple machines
- Java
- * Join Java – concurrent language based on Java
- * X10
- Julia
- Joule – dataflow language, communicates by message passing
- LabVIEW
- Limbo – relative of Alef, used for systems programming in Inferno (operating system)
- MultiLisp – Scheme variant extended to support parallelism
- OCaml
- occam – influenced heavily by Communicating Sequential Processes
- * occam-π – a modern variant of occam, which incorporates ideas from Milner's π-calculus
- Orc
- Oz – multiparadigm language, supports shared-state and message-passing concurrency, and futures, and Mozart Programming System cross-platform Oz
- P
- Pony
- Pict – essentially an executable implementation of Milner's π-calculus
- Python – uses thread-based parallelism and process-based parallelism
- Raku
- Rust
- Scala – implements Erlang-style actors on the JVM
- SequenceL – purely functional, automatically parallelizing and race-free
- SR – research language
- V (Vlang)
- Unified Parallel C
- XProc – XML processing language, enabling concurrency
Constraint programming languages
A constraint programming language is a declarative programming language where relationships between variables are expressed as constraints. Execution proceeds by attempting to find values for the variables which satisfy all declared constraints.Contract languages
Design by contract is programming using defined preconditions, postconditions, and invariants.- Ada
- Ciao
- Clojure
- Cobra
- C++
- D
- Dafny
- Eiffel
- Fortress
- Kotlin
- Mercury
- Oxygene
- Racket
- Sather
- Scala
- SPARK
- Vala
- Vienna Development Method
Curly bracket languages
A curly bracket or curly brace language has syntax that defines a block as the statements between curly brackets, a.k.a. braces,. This syntax originated with BCPL, and was popularized by C. Many curly bracket languages descend from or are strongly influenced by C. Examples:- ABCL/c+
- Alef
- AWK
- ArkTS
- B
- bc
- BCPL
- Ballerina
- C – developed circa 1970 at Bell Labs
- C++
- C#
- Ceylon
- Chapel
- ChucK – audio programming language
- Cilk – concurrent C for multithreaded parallel programming
- Cyclone – a safer C variant
- D
- Dart
- DASL – based on Java
- E
- ECMAScript
- * AssemblyScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * TypeScript
- GLSL
- Go
- HLSL
- Java
- * Processing
- * Groovy
- * Join Java
- * Kotlin
- * Tea
- * X10
- Limbo
- LPC
- MEL
- Nemerle
- Objective-C
- PCASTL
- Perl
- PHP
- Pico
- Pike
- PowerShell
- R
- Raku
- Rust
- S-Lang
- Scala
- sed
- Solidity
- SuperCollider
- Swift
- UnrealScript
- V (Vlang)
- Yorick
- YASS
- Zig
Dataflow languages
Dataflow programming languages rely on a representation of the flow of data to specify the program. Frequently used for reacting to discrete events or for processing streams of data. Examples of dataflow languages include:- Analytica
- Ballerina
- BMDFM
- Hartmann pipelines
- G
- Lucid
- Max
- Oz
- Prograph
- Pure Data
- Reaktor
- StreamBase StreamSQL EventFlow
- Swift (parallel scripting language)
- VEE
- VHDL
- VisSim
- Vvvv
- WebMethods Flow
Data-oriented languages
Data-oriented languages provide powerful ways of searching and manipulating the relations that have been described as entity relationship tables which map one set of things into other sets. Examples of data-oriented languages include:- Associative Programming Language
- Clarion
- Clipper
- dBase a relational database access language
- Gremlin
- MUMPS
- Caché ObjectScript
- RETRIEVE
- RDQL
- SPARQL
- SQL
- Visual FoxPro – a native RDBMS engine, object-oriented, RAD
- Wolfram Mathematica
Decision table languages
Decision tables can be used as an aid to clarifying the logic before writing a program in any language, but in the 1960s a number of languages were developed where the main logic is expressed directly in the form of a decision table, including:Declarative languages
Declarative languages express the logic of a computation without describing its control flow in detail. Declarative programming stands in contrast to imperative programming via imperative programming languages, where control flow is specified by serial orders. functional and logic-based programming languages are also declarative, and constitute the major subcategories of the declarative category. This section lists additional examples not in those subcategories.- Analytica
- Ant
- Curry
- Cypher
- Datalog
- Distributed Application Specification Language
- ECL
- Gremlin
- Inform
- Lustre
- Mercury
- Metafont
- MetaPost
- Modelica
- Nix
- Prolog
- QML
- Oz
- RDQL
- SequenceL – purely functional, automatically parallelizing and race-free
- SPARQL
- SQL
- Soufflé
- VHDL
- Wolfram Mathematica
- WOQL
- xBase
- XSL Transformations
Embeddable languages
In source code
Source embeddable languages embed small pieces of executable code inside a piece of free-form text, often a web page.Client-side embedded languages are limited by the abilities of the browser or intended client. They aim to provide dynamism to web pages without the need to recontact the server.
Server-side embedded languages are much more flexible, since almost any language can be built into a server. The aim of having fragments of server-side code embedded in a web page is to generate additional markup dynamically; the code itself disappears when the page is served, to be replaced by its output.
Server side
- PHP
- VBScript
- Tcl – server-side in NaviServer and an essential component in electronics industry systems
Client side
In object code
A wide variety of dynamic or scripting languages can be embedded in compiled executable code. Basically, object code for the language's interpreter needs to be linked into the executable. Source code fragments for the embedded language can then be passed to an evaluation function as strings. Application control languages can be implemented this way, if the source code is input by the user. Languages with small interpreters are preferred.Educational programming languages
Languages developed primarily for the purpose of teaching and learning of programming.- Alice
- Blockly
- Catrobat
- COMAL
- Elan
- Emerald
- Ezhil
- Logo
- Modula-2
- Pascal
- PL/C
- Racket
- Scheme
- Scratch
- Snap!
- SP/k
- Turing
- Wolfram Mathematica
Esoteric languages
An esoteric programming language is a programming language designed as a test of the boundaries of computer programming language design, as a proof of concept, or as a joke.Extension languages
Extension programming languages are languages embedded into another program and used to harness its features in extension scripts.- AutoLISP
- BeanShell
- CAL
- C/AL
- Guile
- Emacs Lisp
- JavaScript and some dialects, e.g., JScript
- Lua
- OpenCL
- OptimJ
- Perl
- Pike
- PowerShell
- Python
- Rexx
- Ruby
- S-Lang
- SQL
- Squirrel
- Tcl
- Vim script
- Visual Basic for Applications
Fourth-generation languages
Fourth-generation programming languages are high-level programming languages built around database systems. They are generally used in commercial environments.- 1C:Enterprise programming language
- ABAP
- CorVision
- CSC's GraphTalk
- CA-IDEAL for use with CA-DATACOM/DB
- Easytrieve report generator
- FOCUS
- IBM Informix-4GL
- LINC 4GL
- LiveCode
- MAPPER – now part of BIS
- MARK-IV now VISION:BUILDER of CA
- NATURAL
- Progress 4GL
- PV-Wave
- RETRIEVE
- SAS
- SQL
- Ubercode
- Uniface
- Visual DataFlex
- Visual FoxPro
- xBase
Functional languages
Functional programming languages define programs and subroutines as mathematical functions and treat them as first-class. Many so-called functional languages are "impure", containing imperative features. Many functional languages are tied to mathematical calculation tools. Functional languages include:Pure
- Agda
- Clean
- Cuneiform
- Curry
- Elm
- Futhark
- Haskell
- Hope
- Idris
- Joy
- jq
- KRC
- Lean
- Mercury
- Miranda
- Pure
- PureScript
- Rocq
- SAC
- SASL
- SequenceL
- Ur
Impure
- APL
- * J
- * Q (programming language from Kx Systems)
- ATS
- CAL
- C++
- C#
- VB.NET
- Ceylon
- Curl
- D
- Dart
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * Source
- * ArkTS
- * TypeScript
- Erlang
- * Elixir
- * Gleam
- * LFE
- Fexl
- Flix
- G (used in LabVIEW)
- Groovy
- Hop
- Java (since version 8)
- Julia
- Kotlin
- Lisp
- * Clojure
- * Common Lisp
- * Dylan
- * Emacs Lisp
- * LFE
- * Little b
- * Logo
- * Racket
- * Scheme
- ** Guile
- * Tea
- ML
- * Standard ML
- ** Alice
- * OCaml
- * F#
- Nemerle
- Nim
- Opal
- OPS5
- Perl
- * Raku
- PHP
- PL/pgSQL
- Python
- Q (equational programming language)
- R
- Rebol
- Red
- Ruby
- REFAL
- Rust
- Scala
- Swift
- Spreadsheets
- V (Vlang)
- Tcl
- Wolfram Mathematica
Hardware description languages
In electronics, a hardware description language is a specialized computer language used to describe the structure, design, and operation of electronic circuits, and most commonly, digital logic circuits. The two most widely used and well-supported HDL varieties used in industry are Verilog and VHDL. Hardware description languages include:HDLs for analog circuit design
HDLs for digital circuit design
- Advanced Boolean Expression Language
- Altera Hardware Description Language
- Bluespec
- Confluence
- ELLA
- Handel-C
- Impulse C
- Lola
- MyHDL
- PALASM
- Ruby (hardware description language)
- SystemC
- SystemVerilog
- Verilog
- VHDL
Imperative languages
Imperative programming languages may be multi-paradigm and appear in other classifications. Here is a list of programming languages that follow the imperative paradigm:- Ada
- ALGOL 58
- * JOVIAL
- * NELIAC
- ALGOL 60
- ALGOL 68
- BASIC
- C
- C++
- C#
- Ceylon
- CHILL
- COBOL
- D
- Dart
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * Source
- FORTRAN
- GAUSS
- Go
- Groovy
- Icon
- Java
- Julia
- Lua
- MATLAB
- Machine languages
- Modula-2, Modula-3
- MUMPS
- Nim
- OCaml
- Oberon
- Object Pascal
- Open Object Rexx
- Open Programming Language
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language
- Pascal
- Perl
- PHP
- PL/I
- PL/S
- PowerShell
- PROSE
- Python
- Raku
- Rexx
- Ruby
- Rust
- SETL
- Speakeasy
- Swift
- Tcl
- V (Vlang)
- Wolfram Mathematica
Interactive mode languages
Known as REPL - Interactive mode languages act as a kind of shell: expressions or statements can be entered one at a time, and the result of their evaluation seen immediately.- APL
- BASIC
- Clojure
- Common Lisp
- Dart
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * Source
- * ArkTS
- Erlang
- Elixir
- F#
- Fril
- GAUSS
- Groovy
- Guile
- Haskell
- IDL
- J
- Java
- Julia
- Lua
- MUMPS
- Maple
- MATLAB
- ML
- Nim
- OCaml
- Perl
- PHP
- Pike
- PostScript
- PowerShell
- Prolog
- Python
- PROSE
- R
- Raku
- Rebol
- Red
- Rexx
- Ruby
- Scala
- Scheme
- Smalltalk
- S-Lang
- Speakeasy
- Swift
- Tcl
- Unix shell
- Visual FoxPro
- Wolfram Mathematica
Interpreted languages
Interpreted languages are programming languages in which programs may be executed from source code form, by an interpreter. Theoretically, any language can be compiled or interpreted, so the term interpreted language generally refers to languages that are usually interpreted rather than compiled.- Ant
- APL
- AutoHotkey scripting language
- AutoIt scripting language
- BASIC
- Programming Language for Business
- Eiffel
- Emacs Lisp
- FOCAL
- GameMaker Language
- Groovy
- J
- jq
- Java bytecode
- Julia
- JavaScript
- Lisp
- LPC
- Lua
- MUMPS
- Maple
- MATLAB
- OCaml
- Pascal
- PCASTL
- Perl
- PHP
- PostScript
- PowerShell
- PROSE
- Python
- Rexx
- R
- Raku
- Rebol
- Red
- Ruby
- S-Lang
- Seed7
- Speakeasy
- Standard ML
- Spin
- Tcl
- Tea
- TorqueScript
- VBScript
- Windows PowerShell – .NET-based CLI
- Some scripting languages – below
- Wolfram Mathematica
Iterative languages
Iterative languages are built around or offering generators.- Aldor
- Alphard
- C++
- C#
- CLU
- Cobra
- ECMAScript
- Eiffel, through "agents"
- Icon
- Processing Language|IPL-v]
- jq
- Julia
- Lua
- Nim
- PHP
- Python
- Raku
- Sather
Languages by memory management type
Garbage collected languages
Garbage Collection is a form of automatic memory management. The garbage collector attempts to reclaim memory that was allocated by the program but is no longer used.- APL
- C++
- C#
- Clean
- Crystal
- Dart
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * Source
- Emerald
- Erlang
- Go
- Groovy
- Haskell
- Java
- Julia
- Kotlin
- LabVIEW
- Lisp
- * Arc
- * Clojure
- * Common Lisp
- * Dylan
- * Emacs Lisp
- * Guile
- * Racket
- * Scheme
- * Logo
- Lua
- ML
- * Standard ML
- ** Alice
- * OCaml
- Modula-3
- Perl
- PHP
- PowerShell
- Python
- Ruby
- Smalltalk
- Speakeasy
Languages with manual memory management
- ALGOL 68
- Assembly
- BLISS
- C
- C++
- Component Pascal
- Forth
- Fortran
- FreeBASIC
- Modula-2
- Oberon
- Pascal
- PL/I
- Zig
Languages with optional manual memory management
Some programming languages without the inherent ability to manually manage memory, like Cython, Swift, and Scala, are able to import or call functions likemalloc and free from C through a foreign function interface.Languages with deterministic memory management
Languages with automatic reference counting (ARC)
List-based languages – LISPs
List-based languages are a type of data-structured language that are based on the list data structure.- Lisp
- * Arc
- * Clojure
- * Common Lisp
- * Dylan
- * Emacs Lisp
- * Guile
- * Racket
- * Scheme
- * Logo
- Joy
- R
- Source
- Tcl
- * Tea
- TRAC
Little languages
Little languages serve a specialized problem domain.- awk – used for text file manipulation.
- sed – parses and transforms text
- SQL – has only a few keywords and not all the constructs needed for a full programming language – many database management systems extend SQL with additional constructs as a stored procedure language
- XPL - a language designed for, although not limited to, compiler writing
Logic-based languages
Logic-based languages specify a set of attributes that a solution must-have, rather than a set of steps to obtain a solution.Notable languages following this programming paradigm include:
- ALF
- Alma-0
- Curry
- Datalog
- Fril
- Flix
- Janus
- λProlog
- Oz, and Mozart Programming System cross-platform Oz
- Prolog
- * Mercury
- * Visual Prolog
- ROOP
- Soufflé
Machine languages
Machine languages are directly executable by a computer's CPU. They are typically formulated as bit patterns, usually represented in octal or hexadecimal. Each bit pattern causes the circuits in the CPU to execute one of the fundamental operations of the hardware. The activation of specific electrical inputs, and logical settings for CPU state values, control the processor's computation. Individual machine languages are specific to a family of processors; machine-language code for one family of processors cannot run directly on processors in another family unless the processors in question have additional hardware to support it. They are always defined by the CPU developer, not by 3rd parties. The symbolic version, the processor's assembly language, is also defined by the developer, in most cases. Some commonly used machine code instruction sets are:- RISC-V
- ARM
- * Original 32-bit
- * 16-bit Thumb instructions
- * 64-bit
- DEC:
- * 18-bit: PDP-1, PDP-4, PDP-7, PDP-9, PDP-15
- * 12-bit: PDP-5, PDP-8, LINC-8, PDP-12
- * 36-bit: PDP-6, PDP-10, DECSYSTEM-20
- * 16-bit: PDP-11
- * 32-bit: VAX
- * 64-bit: Alpha
- Intel 8008, 8080 and 8085
- * Zilog Z80
- x86:
- * 16-bit x86, first used in the Intel 8086
- ** Intel 8086 and 8088
- ** Intel 80186
- ** Intel 80286
- * IA-32, introduced in the 80386
- * x86-64 – The original specification was created by AMD. There are vendor variants, but they're essentially the same:
- ** AMD's AMD64
- ** Intel's Intel 64
- Burroughs Corporation
- * Burroughs B5000 instruction set
- * Burroughs B6x00-7x00 instruction set
- IBM
- * 305
- * 650
- * 701
- * 702, 705 and 7080
- * 704, 709, 7040, 7044, 7090, 7094
- * 1400 series, 7010
- * 7030
- * 7070, 7072, 7074
- * System/360 and successors, including z/Architecture
- MIPS
- Motorola 6800
- Motorola 68000 series
- MOS Technology 65xx
- * 6502
- * 6510
- * Western Design Center 65816/65802
- National Semiconductor NS320xx
- POWER, first used in the IBM RS/6000
- * PowerPC – used in Power Macintosh and in many game consoles, particularly of the seventh generation.
- * Power ISA – an evolution of PowerPC.
- Sun Microsystems SPARC
- UNIVAC
- * 30-bit computers: 490, 492, 494, 1230
- * 36-bit computers
- ** 1101, 1103, 1105
- ** 1100/2200 series
- MCST Elbrus 2000
Macro languages
Textual substitution macro languages
Macro languages transform one source code file into another. A "macro" is essentially a short piece of text that expands into a longer one, possibly with parameter substitution. They are often used to preprocess source code. Preprocessors can also supply facilities like file inclusion.Macro languages may be restricted to acting on specially labeled code regions. Alternatively, they may not, but in this case it is still often undesirable to expand a macro embedded in a string literal, so they still need a rudimentary awareness of syntax. That being the case, they are often still applicable to more than one language. Contrast with source-embeddable languages like PHP, which are fully featured.
Application macro languages
Scripting languages such as Tcl and ECMAScript have been embedded into applications. These are sometimes called "macro languages", although in a somewhat different sense to textual-substitution macros like m4.Metaprogramming languages
Metaprogramming is the writing of programs that write or manipulate other programs, including themselves, as their data or that do part of the work that is otherwise done at run time during compile time. In many cases, this allows programmers to get more done in the same amount of time as they would take to write all the code manually.- C++
- CWIC
- Curl
- D
- Emacs Lisp
- Elixir
- F#
- Groovy
- Haskell
- Julia
- Lisp
- Lua
- Maude system
- META II
- OCaml
- Nemerle
- Nim
- Perl
- Python
- Raku
- Red
- Ruby
- Rust
- Scheme
- SequenceL
- Smalltalk
- Source
- TREE-META
- Wolfram Mathematica
Modular languages
Modular programming is a programming paradigm of organising functions and symbols into independent modules.- Ada
- ALGOL
- BlitzMax
- C
- C++
- C#
- Clojure
- COBOL
- Common Lisp
- D
- Dart
- eC
- Erlang
- Elixir
- Elm
- F
- F#
- Fortran
- Go
- Haskell
- IBM/360 Assembler
- IBM System/38 and AS/400 Control Language
- IBM RPG
- Java
- JavaScript
- Julia
- MATLAB
- ML
- Modula, Modula-2, Modula-3
- Morpho
- NEWP
- Oberon, Oberon-2
- Objective-C
- OCaml
- Pascal derivatives
- * Component Pascal
- * Object Pascal
- * Turbo Pascal
- * UCSD Pascal
- Perl
- PHP
- PL/I
- PureBasic
- Python
- R
- Ruby
- Rust
- Visual Basic (.NET)
- WebDNA.
Multiparadigm languages
Multiparadigm languages support more than one programming paradigm. They allow a program to use more than one programming style. The goal is to allow programmers to use the best tool for a job, admitting that no one paradigm solves all problems in the easiest or most efficient way.- 1C:Enterprise programming language
- Ada, imperative, object-oriented )
- ALF
- Alma-0
- APL
- BETA
- C++
- C#
- Ceylon
- ChucK
- Cobra
- Common Lisp, aspect-oriented )
- Curl
- Curry
- D
- Dart
- Delphi Object Pascal
- Dylan
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- Eiffel, generic, functional, concurrent )
- F#
- Fantom
- Go,
- Groovy
- Harbour
- Hop
- J
- Java
- Julia
- LabVIEW
- Lua
- Mercury
- Metaobject protocols
- Nemerle
- Objective-C
- OCaml
- Oz, logic, constraint, imperative, object-oriented, and Mozart Programming System cross-platform Oz
- Object Pascal
- Perl, object-oriented, class-oriented, aspect-oriented )
- PHP
- Pike
- Prograph
- Python
- R
- Racket
- Raku
- Rebol, metaprogramming )
- Red, metaprogramming )
- ROOP
- Ruby
- Rust
- Scala
- Seed7
- SISAL
- Spreadsheets
- Swift
- Tcl
- * Tea
- V (Vlang)
- Windows PowerShell
- Wolfram Mathematica
Numerical analysis
Several general-purpose programming languages, such as C and Python, are also used for technical computing, this list focuses on languages almost exclusively used for technical computing.- AIMMS
- AMPL
- Analytica
- Calcpad
- Fortran
- FreeMat
- Frink
- GAUSS
- GAMS
- GNU Data Language
- GNU Octave
- Interactive Data Language
- J
- Julia
- Klerer-May System
- Mathcad
- MATLAB
- MiniZinc
- O-Matrix
- OptimJ
- Ox
- PROSE
- R
- Seneca – an Oberon variant
- Scilab
- SequenceL
- Speakeasy
- Sysquake
- Wolfram Mathematica
Non-English-based languages
Object-oriented class-based languages
Class-based object-oriented programming languages support objects defined by their class. Class definitions include member data. Message passing is a key concept, if not the main concept, in object-oriented languages.Polymorphic functions parameterized by the class of some of their arguments are typically called methods. In languages with single dispatch, classes typically also include method definitions. In languages with multiple dispatch, methods are defined by generic functions. There are exceptions where single dispatch methods are generic functions.
[Multiple dispatch]
Single dispatch
- ActionScript 3.0
- Actor
- Ada 95 and Ada 2005
- APL
- BETA
- C++
- C#
- Ceylon
- Dart
- Oxygene
- ChucK
- Cobra
- ColdFusion
- Curl
- D
- Distributed Application Specification Language
- Delphi Object Pascal
- E
- GNU E
- Eiffel
- * Sather
- * Ubercode
- Fortran 2003
- Fortress
- Gambas
- Game Maker Language
- Harbour
- J
- Java
- * Processing
- * Groovy
- * Join Java
- * Tea
- * X10
- LabVIEW
- Lua
- Modula-2
- * Modula-3
- Nemerle
- NetRexx
- Oberon-2
- Object Pascal
- Object REXX
- Objective-C
- OCaml
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language
- Oz, Mozart Programming System
- Perl 5
- PHP
- Pike
- Prograph
- Python
- Revolution
- Ruby
- Scala
- Speakeasy
- Simula
- Smalltalk
- * Little Smalltalk
- * Pharo
- * Squeak
- ** Scratch
- * IBM VisualAge
- * VisualWorks
- SPIN
- SuperCollider
- VBScript
- Visual DataFlex
- Visual FoxPro
- Visual Prolog
- X++
- Xojo
- XOTcl
Object-oriented prototype-based languages
Prototype-based languages are object-oriented languages where the distinction between classes and instances has been removed:- 1C:Enterprise programming language
- Actor-Based Concurrent Language
- Agora
- Cecil
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- Etoys in Squeak
- Io
- Lua
- MOO
- NewtonScript
- Obliq
- R
- Rebol
- Red
- Self
- TADS
Off-side rule languages
Off-side rule languages denote blocks of code by their indentation.- ISWIM, the abstract language that introduced the rule
- ABC, Python's parent
- * Python
- ** Cobra
- ** Boo
- Miranda, Haskell's parent
- * Orwell
- * Haskell
- ** Curry
- Elixir
- F#
- Nemerle
- Nim
- Occam
- SPIN
- Scala
Procedural languages
Procedural programming languages are based on the concept of the unit and scope of an executable code statement. A procedural program is composed of one or more units or modules, either user coded or provided in a code library; each module is composed of one or more procedures, also called a function, routine, subroutine, or method, depending on the language. Examples of procedural languages include:- Ada
- ALGOL 58
- * JOVIAL
- * NELIAC
- ALGOL 60
- * SMALL Machine ALGOL Like Language
- ALGOL 68
- Alma-0
- BASIC
- BCPL
- BLISS
- C
- C++
- C#
- Ceylon
- CHILL
- ChucK
- COBOL
- Cobra
- ColdFusion
- CPL
- Curl
- D
- Distributed Application Specification Language
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * Source
- Eiffel
- Forth
- Fortran
- * F
- GAUSS
- Go
- Harbour
- HyperTalk
- Java
- * Groovy
- * Join Java
- * Tea
- JOVIAL
- Julia
- Language H
- Lasso
- Modula-2
- MATLAB
- Mesa
- MUMPS
- Nemerle
- Nim
- Oberon, Oberon-2
- * Component Pascal
- * Seneca
- OCaml
- Occam
- Oriel
- Pascal
- * Free Pascal
- * Object Pascal, Delphi
- PCASTL
- Perl
- Pike
- PL/C
- PL/I
- Plus
- PowerShell
- PROSE
- Python
- R
- Raku
- Rapira
- RPG
- Rust
- S-Lang
- VBScript
- Visual Basic
- Visual FoxPro
- Wolfram Mathematica
- Microsoft Dynamics AX
Reflective languages
Reflective programming languages let programs examine and possibly modify their high-level structure at runtime or compile-time. This is most common in high-level virtual machine programming languages like Smalltalk, and less common in lower-level programming languages like C. Languages and platforms supporting reflection:- Befunge
- C++
- Ceylon
- Charm
- ChucK
- CLI
- * C#
- Cobra
- Component Pascal BlackBox Component Builder
- Curl
- Cypher
- Delphi Object Pascal
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- Emacs Lisp
- Eiffel
- Harbour
- Julia
- JVM
- * Java
- * Groovy
- * Join Java
- * X10
- Lisp
- * Clojure
- * Common Lisp
- * Dylan
- * Logo
- * Scheme
- Lua
- Maude system
- Oberon-2 – ETH Oberon System
- Objective-C
- PCASTL
- Perl
- PHP
- Pico
- Poplog
- * POP-11
- PowerShell
- Prolog
- Python
- Raku
- Rebol
- Red
- Ruby
- Rust
- Smalltalk
- * Little Smalltalk
- * Self
- * Squeak
- * IBM VisualAge
- * VisualWorks
- SNOBOL
- Tcl
- Wolfram Mathematica
- XOTcl
- X++
- Xojo
Rule-based languages
Rule-based languages instantiate rules when activated by conditions in a set of data. Of all possible activations, some set is selected and the statements belonging to those rules execute. Rule-based languages include:- awk
- CLIPS
- Claire
- Constraint Handling Rules
- Drools
- GOAL agent programming language
- Jess
- OPS5
- Prolog
- ToonTalk – robots are rules
- Wolfram Mathematica
Scripting languages
- AngelScript
- AppleScript
- AutoHotKey
- AutoIt
- AWK
- bc
- BeanShell
- C
- Ch
- CLI
- * C#
- CLIST
- ColdFusion
- ECMAScript
- * ActionScript
- * ECMAScript for XML
- * JavaScript
- * JScript
- * Source
- Emacs Lisp
- CMS EXEC
- EXEC 2
- Game Maker Language
- GDScript
- Io
- JASS
- Julia
- JVM
- * Groovy
- * Java
- * Join Java
- Lasso
- Lua
- MAXScript
- MEL
- Oriel
- Pascal Script
- Perl
- PHP
- Python
- R
- Raku
- Rebol
- Red
- Rexx
- * Object REXX
- Revolution
- Ruby
- RUNCOM
- S-Lang
- sed
- Smalltalk
- Squirrel
- Tea
- Tcl
- TorqueScript
- VBScript
- Many shell command languages have powerful scripting abilities:
- * sh and compatibles
- ** Ksh
- ** Bash
- * DIGITAL Command Language on VMS
- * PowerShell
Stack-based languages
Stack-based languages are a type of data-structured language that are based on the stack data structure.- Beatnik
- Befunge
- Factor
- Forth
- Joy
- Piet
- Poplog via its implementation language POP-11
- PostScript
- RPL
- S-Lang
Synchronous languages
Synchronous programming languages are optimized for programming reactive systems, systems that are often interrupted and must respond quickly. Many such systems are also called realtime systems, and are used often in embedded systems.Examples:
Shading languages
A shading language is a graphics programming language adapted to programming shader effects. Such language forms usually consist of special data types, like "color" and "normal". Due to the variety of target markets for 3D computer graphics.Real-time rendering
They provide both higher hardware abstraction and a more flexible programming model than previous paradigms which hardcoded transformation and shading equations. This gives the programmer greater control over the rendering process and delivers richer content at lower overhead.- Adobe Graphics Assembly Language
- ARB assembly language
- OpenGL Shading Language
- High-Level Shading Language or DirectX Shader Assembly Language
- PlayStation Shader Language
- Metal Shading Language
- Cg
Offline rendering
Shading languages used in offline rendering produce maximum image quality. Processing such shaders is time-consuming. The computational power required can be expensive because of their ability to produce photorealistic results.Syntax-handling languages
These languages assist with generating lexical analyzers and parsers for context-free grammars.- ANTLR
- Coco/R
- GNU bison
- GNU Flex
- JavaCC
- lex
- M4
- Parsing expression grammar
- Prolog
- Emacs Lisp
- Lisp
- Raku
- SableCC
- Scheme
- yacc
- XPL
System languages
A system programming language is for low-level tasks like memory management or task management; it usually refers to a language used for systems programming; such languages are designed for writing system software, which usually requires different development approaches relative to application software.System software is computer software designed to operate and control computer hardware, and provide a platform to run application software. System software includes software categories such as operating systems, utility software, device drivers, compilers, and linkers. Examples of system languages include:
Transformation languages
Transformation languages serve the purpose of transforming source code specified in a certain formal language into a defined destination format code. It is most commonly used in intermediate components of more complex super-systems in order to adopt internal results for input into a succeeding processing routine.Visual languages
Visual programming languages let users specify programs in a two--dimensional way, instead of as one-dimensional text strings, via graphic layouts of various types. Some dataflow programming languages are also visual languages.- Analytica
- Blockly
- Clickteam Fusion
- DRAKON
- Fabrik
- Grasshopper
- Max
- NXT-G
- Pict
- Prograph
- Pure Data
- Quartz Composer
- Scratch
- Snap!
- Simulink
- Spreadsheets
- Stateflow
- Subtext
- ToonTalk
- VEE
- VisSim
- Vvvv
- XOD
Wirth languages
Computer scientist Niklaus Wirth designed and implemented several influential languages.- ALGOL W
- Euler
- Modula
- * Modula-2, Modula-3, variants
- ** Obliq Modula 3 variant
- Oberon
- * Component Pascal
- * Oberon-2
- Pascal
- * Object Pascal
- PL360