Essentials of Programming Languages

by ;
Edition: 3rd
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2008-04-18
Publisher(s): The MIT Press
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Summary

This book provides students with a deep, working understanding of the essential concepts of programming languages. Most of these essentials relate to the semantics, or meaning, of program elements, and the text uses interpreters (short programs that directly analyze an abstract representation of the program text) to express the semantics of many essential language elements in a way that is both clear and executable. The approach is both analytical and hands-on. The book provides views of programming languages using widely varying levels of abstraction, maintaining a clear connection between the high-level and low-level views. Exercises are a vital part of the text and are scattered throughout; the text explains the key concepts, and the exercises explore alternative designs and other issues. The complete Scheme code for all the interpreters and analyzers in the book can be found online through The MIT Press Web site. For this new edition, each chapter has been revised and many new exercises have been added. Significant additions have been made to the text, including completely new chapters on modules and continuation-passing style. Essentials of Programming Languagescan be used for both graduate and undergraduate courses, and for continuing education courses for programmers.

Author Biography

Daniel P. Friedman is Professor of Computer Science in the School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering at Indiana University and is the author of many books published by the MIT Press, including The Little Schemer and The Seasoned Schemer (with Matthias Felleisen); The Little Prover (with Carl Eastlund); and The Reasoned Schemer (with William E. Byrd, Oleg Kiselyov, and Jason Hemann).

Mitchell Wand is Professor of Computer Science at Northeastern University.

Table of Contents

Forewordp. ix
Prefacep. xv
Acknowledgementsp. xxi
Inductive Sets of Datap. 1
Data Abstractionp. 31
Expressionsp. 57
Statep. 103
Continuation-Passing Interpretersp. 139
Continuation-Passing Stylep. 193
Typesp. 233
Modulesp. 275
Objects and Classesp. 325
For Further Readingp. 371
The SLLGEN Parsing Systemp. 377
Bibliographyp. 391
Indexp. 399
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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