10 Forces Guiding the Future of Scripting
snydeq writes "InfoWorld examines the platforms and passions underlying today's popular dynamic languages, and though JavaScript, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Groovy, and other scripting tools are fast achieving the critical mass necessary to flourish into the future, 10 forces in particular appear to be driving the evolution of this development domain. From the cooption of successful ideas across languages, to the infusion of application development into applications that are fast evolving beyond their traditional purpose, to the rise of frameworks, the cloud, and amateur code enablers, each will have a profound effect on the future of today's dynamic development tools."
Larry Wall nabbed Python's object system when he created Perl...
Erm, WTF? Perl was released in 1987; Python was 1991.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
From Larry Wall's 2007 State of the Onion:
The safari javascript engine is called SquirrelFish (And there's also SquirrelFish Extreme, which compiles javascript into machine code, with predictable speed increases.) and it is open-source as it's part of webkit.
http://webkit.org/
upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
"It wasn't until the Europeans discovered Sanskrit in the 18th century until European languages had any formal grammar."
Well, sure... It's only that the first printed greek grammar is from 1453; the first modern grammar, the Spanish one from Nebrija, dates from 1492; the first Italian one, that of Trissino, is from 1529, the Portuguesse one from Fernando de Oliveira is from 1536 and the French one from Louis Meigret was published on 1550.