Ruby Programming Language
Posted by keremkosaner on 29 June 2007

Ruby is a reflective, dynamic, object-oriented programming language. It combines syntax inspired by Perl with Smalltalk like object oriented features, and also shares some features with Python, Lisp, Dylan, and CLU. Ruby is a single-pass interpreted language. Its official implementation is free software written in C. The language was created by Yukihiro “Matz” Matsumoto, who started working on Ruby on February 24, 1993, and released it to the public in 1995. “Ruby” was named after a colleague’s birthstone.
Several virtual machines have been developed for Ruby. These include JRuby, a port of Ruby to the Java platform, IronRuby, an implementation for the .NET Framework produced by Microsoft, and Rubinius, an interpreter modeled after self-hosting Smalltalk virtual machines.
Ruby is object-oriented: every data type is an object, including even classes and types that many other languages designate as primitives (such as integers, booleans, and “nil”). Every function is a method. Named values (variables) always designate references to objects, not the objects themselves. Ruby supports inheritance with dynamic dispatch, mixins and singleton methods (belonging to, and defined for, a single instance rather than being defined on the class). Though Ruby does not support multiple inheritance, classes can import modules as mixins. Procedural syntax is supported, but all methods defined outside of the scope of a particular object are actually methods of the Object class. Since this class is parent to every other class, the changes become visible to all classes and objects.
Ruby has been described as a multi-paradigm programming language: it allows you to program procedurally (defining functions/variables outside classes makes them part of the root, ’self’ Object), with object orientation (everything is an object) or functionally (it has anonymous functions, closures, and continuations; statements all have values, and functions return the last evaluation). It has support for introspection, reflection and metaprogramming, as well as support for threads. Ruby features dynamic typing, and supports parametric polymorphism.
| From, Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia REF, RUBY, A Programmer’s Best Friend |
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