Golo (programming language) explained

Golo
Developer:INSA Lyon
Latest Release Version:3.4.0
Typing:Dynamic, weak
Platform:Java virtual machine
Operating System:Cross-platform
License:Eclipse Public 2.0

Golo is computer software, a programming language for the Java virtual machine (JVM). It is simple, with dynamic, weak typing. It was created in 2012 as part of the research activities of the DynaMid group of the Centre of Innovation in Telecommunications and Integration of service (CITI) Laboratory at Institut national des sciences appliquées de Lyon (INSA). It is distributed as free and open-source software under the Eclipse Public License 2.0.

History

It has been built as a showcase on how to build a language runtime with invokedynamic. Golo is largely interoperable with the programming language Java and other JVM languages (e.g., numeric types are boxing classes from java.lang, and collection literals leverage java.util classes), that runs on the JVM.

In June 2015, Golo became an official Eclipse Foundation project. The project was terminated in September 2022.[1]

Technical details

The language features have been initially designed around the abilities of invokedynamic – JSR 292 that appeared in Java SE 7. Golo uses ahead-of-time compilation of bytecode. While the bytecode remains stable over a program execution, the invokedynamic-based reconfigurable call sites support the adaptive dispatch mechanisms put in place for helping the HotSpot just-in-time compiler (JIT) to extract reasonable performance.

Publications

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Termination Review . projects.eclipse.org . 29 August 2022 . 24 October 2022.