SALSA (programming language)
From HandWiki
Revision as of 10:23, 8 March 2021 by imported>TextAI (simplify)
Paradigm | Actor model |
---|---|
First appeared | 2001 |
Stable release | 1.1.5
/ July 18, 2011 |
Implementation language | Java |
OS | cross-platform |
Filename extensions | .salsa |
Website | http://wcl.cs.rpi.edu/salsa/ |
The SALSA programming language (Simple Actor Language System and Architecture) is an actor-oriented programming language that uses concurrency primitives beyond asynchronous message passing, including token-passing, join, and first-class continuations. It also supports distributed computing over the Internet with universal naming, remote communication, and migration linguistic abstractions and associated middleware. For portability, it produces Java code.
Examples
Hello World
module demo; /* This behavior simply sends two print(...) messages to the standardOutput actor. */ behavior HelloWorld { /* The act(...) message handler is invoked by stand-alone theaters automatically and is used to bootstrap salsa programs. */ void act( String[] argv ) { standardOutput<-print( "Hello" ) @ standardOutput<-print( "World!" ); } /* Notice that the above code is different from standardOutput<-print( "Hello" ); standardOutput<-print( "World!" ); the code above uses a continuation to insure that the world message is sent after the hello message completes processing. */ }
Standard Input
module demo; /* This behavior simply prints out a string, reads a line from the Standard Input, combines the return value of the Standard Input with other strings, and then prints out the combined string. */ behavior StandardInputTest{ public StandardInputTest() {} String mergeString(String str1, String str2, String str3) { return str1+str2+str3; } void act(String[] args) { standardOutput<-println("What's your name?")@ standardInput<-readLine()@ self<-mergeString("Hi, ",token, ". Nice to meet you!" )@ standardOutput<-println(token); } }
External links