Go!
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Go! is a logic programming language. It draws significant influence from Prolog[1].
The language retains foundational concepts from its predecessor while incorporating its own distinct features. Development focused on maintaining the declarative programming paradigm established by Prolog[1].
Go!
Summary
Go! is a multi-paradigm programming language[1]. Go! draws 72 Wikipedia views per month (multi_paradigm_programming_language category, ranking #3 of 5).[2]
Key Facts
- Go! was influenced by Prolog[3].
- Go!'s instance of is recorded as multi-paradigm programming language[4].
- Go!'s instance of is recorded as procedural programming language[5].
- Go!'s instance of is recorded as concurrent programming language[6].
- Go!'s developer is recorded as Frank G. McCabe[7].
- Go!'s developer is recorded as Keith Clark[8].
- Go!'s copyright license is recorded as GNU General Public License, version 2.0[9].
- Go!'s operating system is recorded as Unix-like operating system[10].
- Go!'s software version identifier is recorded as 1.1f[11].
- +2003-07-14T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Go![12].
- Go!'s publication date is recorded as +2000-02-29T00:00:00Z[13].
- Go!'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09g8byv[14].
- Go!'s source code repository URL is recorded as https://github.com/fgmccabe/go[15].
- Go!'s different from is recorded as Go[16].
- Go!'s programming paradigm is recorded as concurrent computing[17].
- Go!'s programming paradigm is recorded as logic programming[18].
- Go!'s programming paradigm is recorded as functional programming[19].
- Go!'s programming paradigm is recorded as imperative programming[20].
- Go!'s copyright status is recorded as copyrighted[21].
- Go!'s typing discipline is recorded as strong typing[22].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include multi-paradigm programming language[4], procedural programming language[5], and concurrent programming language[6].
History and Context
+2003-07-14T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Go![12].
Why It Matters
Go! draws 72 Wikipedia views per month (multi_paradigm_programming_language category, ranking #3 of 5).[2]