| Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: object-oriented | 
|---|---|
| Designed by | Charles Esterbrook | 
| Developer | Cobra Language LLC | 
| First appeared | 2006 | 
| Final release | 0.9.6
   /    December 23, 2013 | 
| Typing discipline | strong, static, dynamic, inferred | 
| OS | Microsoft .NET, Mono | 
| License | MIT | 
| Filename extensions | .cobra | 
| Website | cobra-language | 
| Influenced by | |
| Python, Eiffel, C#, Objective-C | |
Cobra is a discontinued general-purpose, object-oriented programming language.[1] Cobra is designed by Charles Esterbrook, and runs on the Microsoft .NET and Mono platforms.[2] It is strongly influenced by Python, C#, Eiffel, Objective-C, and other programming languages.[3] It supports both static and dynamic typing.[4][5] It has support for unit tests and contracts.[4] It has lambda expressions, closures, list comprehensions, and generators.[6]
Cobra is an open-source project; it was released under the MIT License on February 29, 2008.[7][8]
Features
- Object-oriented
- 
- Namespaces
- Classes, interfaces, structs, extensions, enumerations
- Methods, properties, indexers
- Mixins, extension methods
- Generics, attributes
 
- Quality control
- 
- Contracts, assertions
- Unit tests, docstrings
- Compile-time nil-tracking
 
- Expressiveness
- 
- Static and dynamic binding
- List, dictionary, and set literals
- inand- impliesoperator
- forexpressions
- Slicing
- Interpolated strings
- Compile-time type inference
- Lambdas and closures
 
- General productivity
- 
- Exception handling
- Postmortem exception report
- Garbage collection
 
- Scripting conveniences
- 
- Clean syntax
- Dynamic binding
- One-step run
- Shebang line (#!)
 
- Miscellaneous
- 
- Documentation tool (cobra -doc)
- Syntax highlighting tool (cobra -highlight)
 
- Documentation tool (
Examples
The following examples can be run from a file using cobra <filename>.
Hello World
class Hello
    def main
        print 'HELLO WORLD'
A simple class
class Person
    var _name as String
    var _age as int
    cue init(name as String, age as int)
        _name, _age = name, age
    def toString as String is override
        return 'My name is [_name] and I am [_age] years old.'
References
- ↑ "The Cobra Programming Language". Cobra Language LLC. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
- ↑ Charles Esterbrook (Jan 28, 2008). Lang.NET Symposium 2008 – The Cobra Programming Language. Microsoft. Archived from the original (wmv) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved 2010-08-31.
- ↑ Bridgwater, Adrian (5 March 2008). "Cobra takes a bite at open source". ZDNet UK. Retrieved 2010-08-31.
- 1 2 Neward, Ted (June 2009). "Reaping the Benefits of Cobra". MSDN Magazine.
- ↑ Erickson, Jonathan (April 2008). "Was George Costanza a Computer Programmer?". Dr. Dobb's Journal.
- ↑ Morris, Richard (April 2010). "Chuck Esterbrook: Geek of the Week". Simple-talk.
- ↑ Krill, Paul (Feb 7, 2008). "Cobra language slithering to open source". InfoWorld. Retrieved 2010-08-31.
- ↑ "The Cobra Programming Language". Cobra Language LLC. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
External links
- Official website
- The Cobra blog by Charles Esterbrook
- Cobra News Index
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