No, it's aimed at beginning-level programming students, especially those who are struggling with the idea of recursion.
So, not only is it not intended as a full-featured real world programming language, but it is definitely not suited for that purpose: -- Very small set of build-in functions. -- Currently, no way to handle higher-order functions or local variables (let or where expressions). -- Interpreted. -- Stack size limited to 1000. Of course, that could be changed, but the limit is there for a reason: if a beginning programmer writes a function that is called recursively 1000 times before it gets to the base case, it's probably an error (infinite recursion). Greg On 2010-May-14, Ivan Miljenovic wrote: > On 14 May 2010 11:50, Gregory D. Weber <[email protected]> wrote: > > Introducing Sifflet -- version 0.1.5, first public release! > > > > Sifflet is a visual, functional programming language. > > Sifflet programmers define functions by drawing diagrams. > > Sifflet shows how a function call is evaluated on the diagram. > > It is intended as an aid for learning about recursion. > > So is Sifflet meant to be a full-featured programming language used > for "real world" programs? If so, how well does it scale? > > -- > Ivan Lazar Miljenovic > [email protected] > IvanMiljenovic.wordpress.com > _______________________________________________ > Haskell mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell -- ___ ___ __ _ / _ \ / _ \| | | | Gregory D. Weber, Associate Professor / /_\// / | | | /\ | | Indiana University East / /_\\/ /__| | |/ \| | http://mypage.iu.edu/~gdweber/ \____/\_____/\___/\__/ Tel. (765) 973-8420; FAX (765) 973-8550 _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [email protected] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell
