Ωmega
| Omega | |
|---|---|
| Original author(s) | Tim Sheard | 
| Developer(s) | Portland State University | 
| Initial release | March 3, 2005 | 
| Stable release | 1.5    / April 29, 2011  | 
| Operating system | Cross-platform | 
| Type | Interpreter | 
| License | BSD 3-clause | 
| Website | web | 
The Omega interpreter[1] is a strict pure functional programming interpreter similar to the Hugs Haskell interpreter. The syntax closely resembles that of Haskell but with important differences:
- Omega uses strict evaluation (Hugs uses lazy evaluation);
 - Ability to introduce new kinds;
 - Allows writing functions at the type level.
 
Other differences are documented in the Omega user guide.[1]
Omega was developed by Professor Tim Sheard of Portland State University's Computer Science Department as a language with an infinite hierarchy of computational levels, e.g., value, type, kind, sort. The underlying concept is that data, and functions manipulating data, can be introduced at any level.[2]
References
- ^ a b Sheard, Tim. Ωmega Users' Guide. Retrieved 2007-06-09.
 - ^ Sheard, Tim; Linger, Nathan (June 30, 2007). "Programming in Ωmega". 2nd Central European Functional Programming School.
 
External links
- web
.cecs , with download.pdx .edu /~sheard /Omega