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  2. List (abstract data type) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_(abstract_data_type)

    In Lisp, lists are the fundamental data type and can represent both program code and data. In most dialects, the list of the first three prime numbers could be written as (list 2 3 5) . In several dialects of Lisp, including Scheme , a list is a collection of pairs, consisting of a value and a pointer to the next pair (or null value), making a ...

  3. Comparison of C Sharp and Java - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_C_Sharp_and_Java

    Compared to non-generic code with manual casts, these casts will be the same, [74] but compared to compile-time verified code that would not need runtime casts and checks, these operations represent a performance overhead. C#/.NET generics guarantee type-safety and are verified at compile time, making extra checks/casts are unnecessary at runtime.

  4. Wildcard (Java) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildcard_(Java)

    In the Java programming language, the wildcard? is a special kind of type argument [1] that controls the type safety of the use of generic (parameterized) types. [2] It can be used in variable declarations and instantiations as well as in method definitions, but not in the definition of a generic type.

  5. Generics in Java - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generics_in_Java

    Generics are a facility of generic programming that were added to the Java programming language in 2004 within version J2SE 5.0. They were designed to extend Java's type system to allow "a type or method to operate on objects of various types while providing compile-time type safety". [ 1 ]

  6. Array programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Array_programming

    The fundamental idea behind array programming is that operations apply at once to an entire set of values. This makes it a high-level programming model as it allows the programmer to think and operate on whole aggregates of data, without having to resort to explicit loops of individual scalar operations.

  7. Generic programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_programming

    Generic programming pioneer Alexander Stepanov wrote, Generic programming is about abstracting and classifying algorithms and data structures. It gets its inspiration from Knuth and not from type theory. Its goal is the incremental construction of systematic catalogs of useful, efficient and abstract algorithms and data structures.

  8. Dependency injection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_injection

    Go does not support classes and usually dependency injection is either abstracted by a dedicated library that utilizes reflection or generics (the latter being supported since Go 1.18 [37]). [38] A simpler example without using dependency injection libraries is illustrated by the following example of an MVC web application.

  9. Linked list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linked_list

    Linked lists are among the simplest and most common data structures. They can be used to implement several other common abstract data types, including lists, stacks, queues, associative arrays, and S-expressions, though it is not uncommon to implement those data structures directly without using a linked list as the basis.