CHICKEN
0 sources
CHICKEN is a software application that was established on July 20, 2000 .
CHICKEN
Summary
CHICKEN is a free software[1]. CHICKEN ranks in the top 9% of free_software entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (29 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- CHICKEN's image is recorded as Chicken 5.0.0.png[3].
- CHICKEN's instance of is recorded as free software[4].
- CHICKEN's instance of is recorded as programming language[5].
- CHICKEN's logo image is recorded as Chicken Scheme logo and wordmark.svg[6].
- CHICKEN's copyright license is recorded as 3-clause BSD License[7].
- CHICKEN's programmed in is recorded as Q187560[8].
- CHICKEN's operating system is recorded as cross-platform[9].
- CHICKEN's software version identifier is recorded as 4.13.0[10].
- CHICKEN's software version identifier is recorded as 5.0.0[11].
- CHICKEN's software version identifier is recorded as 5.3.0[12].
- CHICKEN's software version identifier is recorded as 5.4.0[13].
- +2000-07-20T00:00:00Z marks the founding of CHICKEN[14].
- CHICKEN's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0c00dy[15].
- CHICKEN's official website is recorded as https://www.call-cc.org/[16].
- CHICKEN's readable file format is recorded as Scheme script[17].
- CHICKEN's readable file format is recorded as XML[18].
- CHICKEN's readable file format is recorded as JSON[19].
- CHICKEN's user manual URL is recorded as http://wiki.call-cc.org/man/5/The%20User%27s%20Manual[20].
- CHICKEN's Free Software Directory entry is recorded as Chicken[21].
- CHICKEN's Debian stable package is recorded as chicken-bin[22].
- CHICKEN's Arch Linux package is recorded as chicken[23].
- CHICKEN's Fedora package is recorded as chicken[24].
- CHICKEN's Ubuntu package is recorded as chicken-bin[25].
- CHICKEN's Gentoo package is recorded as dev-scheme/chicken[26].
- CHICKEN's AUR package is recorded as chicken-git[27].
Why It Matters
CHICKEN ranks in the top 9% of free_software entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (29 views/month).[2] CHICKEN has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] CHICKEN is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]