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integration_of_various_programming_languages_into_pogamut [2010/10/13 18:39] jakub_gemrot created |
integration_of_various_programming_languages_into_pogamut [2010/10/13 18:43] jakub_gemrot |
<th style="font-weight:normal;">Excitement:</th> | <th style="font-weight:normal;">Excitement:</th> |
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<th><font color="blue">Have you always wanted to have a quick overview through many programming languages and no project where to test them? And score points? You've found it!</font></th> | <th><font color="blue">Have you always wanted to know what Python, Ruby, Scala and other languages are but have no project where to test them? And score points the very same time at MFF? You've found it!</font></th> |
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The Pogamut platform are running on top of Java Virtual Machine (JVM) providing a quick way for coding bot's behaviors in Java programming language. But JVM offers more! There exists many languages which can interpreted by JVM apart Java (even with interpreter or via compiler that produces Java Bytecode). Ruby, Python, PHP, Scala, Javascript and many more. Now we would like to check whether they can be truly used with Pogamut. So the main part of work is to sit down and get hang of how these languages can be combined with Pogamut. You should not fear it - it usually comes down to the question "how the language are representing classes / objects" and use the very same interface the Pogamut is offering in different language.</font></th> | The Pogamut platform are running on top of Java Virtual Machine (JVM) providing a quick way for coding bot behavior in Java programming language. But JVM offers more! There exists many languages which can interpreted by JVM apart Java (even via Java interpreter or via compiler that produces Java Bytecode). Ruby, Python, PHP, Scala, Javascript and many more. This waht the project is all about. We would like to check whether these languages can be truly used with Pogamut. So the main part of work will be to sit down and get these languages up and running in JVM and test whether they are suitable for Pogamut. And we're pretty sure they are, because it will eventually comes down to the question "how the language are representing classes / objects"? And if they do, they could be mapped to Java classes/objects of the Pogamut platform.</font></th> |
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