Orwell (programming language)
| Orwell | |
|---|---|
| Paradigm | Lazy, functional | 
| Designed by | Philip Wadler | 
| Developer | Martin Raskovsky | 
| First appeared | 1984 | 
| Stable release | 6.00
   / January 1990 | 
| OS | Unix | 
| Influenced by | |
| Miranda | |
| Influenced | |
| Haskell | |
Orwell is a small, lazy evaluation, functional programming language implemented principally by Martin Raskovsky and first released in 1984 by Philip Wadler during his time as a Research Fellow in the Programming Research Group, part of the Oxford University Computing Laboratory. Developed as a free alternative to Miranda, it was a forerunner of Haskell and was one of the first programming languages to support list comprehensions and pattern matching.
The name is a tribute to George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the year in which the language was released. In the late 1980s and the 1990s, most of the computing practical assignments for undergraduates studying for a degree in Mathematics and Computation at Oxford University were required to be completed using the language.