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  2. Pattern matching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_matching

    Tree patterns are used in some programming languages as a general tool to process data based on its structure, e.g. C#, [1] F#, [2] Haskell, [3] Java [4], ML, Python, [5] Ruby, [6] Rust, [7] Scala, [8] Swift [9] and the symbolic mathematics language Mathematica have special syntax for expressing tree patterns and a language construct for ...

  3. Join-pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Join-pattern

    Scheduler : There is a scheduling between join patterns (e.g. a round-robin scheduler, first-match scheduler). [6] Design patterns : The join-pattern is first of all a behavioral and a concurrency pattern. Concurrent programming : It's execute in a concurrent way. Pattern matching : The join-pattern works with matching tasks.

  4. Jess (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jess_(programming_language)

    Rather than a procedural paradigm, where one program has a loop that is activated only one time, the declarative paradigm used by Jess applies a set of rules to a set of facts continuously by a process named pattern matching. Rules can modify the set of facts, or can execute any Java code. It uses the Rete algorithm [1] to execute rules.

  5. JAPE (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JAPE_(linguistics)

    Thus, it is useful for pattern-matching, semantic extraction, and many other operations over syntactic trees such as those produced by natural language parsers. JAPE is a version of CPSL – Common Pattern Specification Language. A JAPE grammar consists of a set of phases, each of which consists of a set of pattern/action rules.

  6. Category:Pattern matching programming languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Pattern_matching...

    It should only contain pages that are Pattern matching programming languages or lists of Pattern matching programming languages, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Pattern matching programming languages in general should be placed in relevant topic categories.

  7. Data-driven programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data-driven_programming

    Standard examples of data-driven languages are the text-processing languages sed and AWK, [1] and the document transformation language XSLT, where the data is a sequence of lines in an input stream – these are thus also known as line-oriented languages – and pattern matching is primarily done via regular expressions or line numbers.

  8. Standard ML - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_ML

    They are easy to define and easy to use, largely because of pattern matching, and most Standard ML implementations' pattern-exhaustiveness checking and pattern redundancy checking. In object-oriented programming languages, a disjoint union can be expressed as class hierarchies. However, in contrast to class hierarchies, ADTs are closed. Thus ...

  9. Pattern recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_recognition

    This is opposed to pattern matching algorithms, which look for exact matches in the input with pre-existing patterns. A common example of a pattern-matching algorithm is regular expression matching, which looks for patterns of a given sort in textual data and is included in the search capabilities of many text editors and word processors.