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How enterprises use functional languages, and why they don’t. The Logic Programming Paradigm (1998)

by P Wadler
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Socio-PLT: Principles for Programming Language Adoption

by Leo A. Meyerovich, Ariel Rabkin
"... Why do some programming languages fail and others succeed? What does the answer tell us about programming language design, implementation, and principles? To help answer these and other questions, we argue for a sociologicallygrounded programming language theory: socio-PLT. Researchers in the social ..."
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Why do some programming languages fail and others succeed? What does the answer tell us about programming language design, implementation, and principles? To help answer these and other questions, we argue for a sociologicallygrounded programming language theory: socio-PLT. Researchers in the social sciences have studied adoption in many contexts. We show how their findings are applicable to programming language design. For example, many programming language features provide benefits that programmers cannot directly or immediately observe and therefore may not find compelling. From clean water to safe sex, the health community has long examined how to surmount similar observability barriers. We use such results from outside of programming language theory to frame a research agenda that should help us understand the social foundations of languages. Finally, we examine implications of our approach, such as for the design space of language features and the assessment of scientific research into programming languages. 1.
The National Science Foundation
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