List of concurrent and parallel programming languages

This article lists concurrent and parallel programming languages, categorizing them by a defining paradigm. Concurrent and parallel programming languages involve multiple timelines. Such languages provide synchronization constructs whose behavior is defined by a parallel execution model. A concurrent programming language is defined as one which uses the concept of simultaneously executing processes or threads of execution as a means of structuring a program. A parallel language is able to express programs that are executable on more than one processor. Both types are listed, as concurrency is a useful tool in expressing parallelism, but it is not necessary. In both cases, the features must be part of the language syntax and not an extension such as a library (libraries such as the posix-thread library implement a parallel execution model but lack the syntax and grammar required to be a programming language).

The following categories aim to capture the main, defining feature of the languages contained, but they are not necessarily orthogonal.

Coordination languages

  • CnC (Concurrent Collections)
  • Glenda
  • Linda coordination language
  • Millipede

Dataflow programming

  • CAL
  • E (also object-oriented)
  • Joule (also distributed)
  • LabVIEW (also synchronous, also object-oriented)
  • Lustre (also synchronous)
  • Preesm (also synchronous)
  • Signal (also synchronous)
  • SISAL
  • BMDFM

Distributed computing

  • Bloom
  • Emerald
  • Hermes
  • Julia
  • Limbo
  • MPD
  • Oz - Multi-paradigm language with particular support for constraint and distributed programming.
  • Sequoia
  • SR

Event-driven and hardware description

  • Esterel (also synchronous)
  • SystemC
  • SystemVerilog
  • Verilog
  • Verilog-AMS - math modeling of continuous time systems
  • VHDL

Functional programming

Logic programming

Monitor-based

Multi-threaded

Object-oriented programming

Partitioned global address space (PGAS)

Message passing

Actor model

  • Axum - a domain-specific language being developed by Microsoft.
  • Dart - using Isolates
  • Elixir (runs on BEAM, the Erlang virtual machine)
  • Erlang
  • Pony (programming language)
  • Janus
  • Red
  • SALSA
  • Scala/Akka (toolkit)
  • Smalltalk
  • Akka.NET
  • LabVIEW - LabVIEW Actor Framework

CSP-based

APIs/frameworks

These application programming interfaces support parallelism in host languages.

See also

References

  1. ^ Thom Frühwirth (9 July 2009). Constraint Handling Rules. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-87776-3.
  2. ^ "Using Threads to Run Code Simultaneously - The Rust Programming Language". doc.rust-lang.org. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  3. ^ Documentation » The Python Standard Library » Concurrent Execution
  4. ^ "Using Message Passing to Transfer Data Between Threads - The Rust Programming Language". doc.rust-lang.org. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  5. ^ Alan Kay The Early History Of Smalltalk
  6. ^ "Crystal Programming Language – Concurrency". Retrieved 10 August 2018.