Q#
0 sources
Q
Summary
Q# is a quantum programming language[1]. Q# draws 71 Wikipedia views per month (quantum_programming_language category, ranking #1 of 2).[2]
Key Facts
- Q# was influenced by Q2370[3].
- Q# was influenced by F#[4].
- Q#'s instance of is recorded as quantum programming language[5].
- Q#'s instance of is recorded as functional programming language[6].
- Q#'s instance of is recorded as imperative programming language[7].
- Q#'s developer is recorded as Microsoft Quantum Architectures and Computation group[8].
- Q#'s developer is recorded as Microsoft[9].
- Q#'s copyright license is recorded as MIT License[10].
- Q#'s designed by is recorded as Microsoft Research[11].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93180[12].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93281[13].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93282[14].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93283[15].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93284[16].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93285[17].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93286[18].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 93287[19].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 94319[20].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97052[21].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97053[22].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97054[23].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97055[24].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97056[25].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97057[26].
- Q#'s software version identifier is recorded as 97058[27].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include quantum programming language[5], functional programming language[6], and imperative programming language[7].
History and Context
+2017-12-11T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Q#[28].
Why It Matters
Q# draws 71 Wikipedia views per month (quantum_programming_language category, ranking #1 of 2).[2] Q# has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29] Q# is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]