Clean (programming language)

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Clean
Paradigm functional
Designed by Software Technology Research Group of Radboud University Nijmegen
Typing discipline strong, static, dynamic
Major implementations Clean
Influenced by Lean, Haskell

In computer science, Clean is a general-purpose purely functional computer programming language.

Contents

Hello world (Store as hello.icl):

module hello
Start = "Hello, world!"

Factorial:

 module factorial
fac 0 = 1 fac n = n * fac (n-1) // find the factorial of 10 Start = fac 10

Fibonacci sequence:

 module fibonacci
fib 0 = 0 fib 1 = 1 fib n = fib (n - 2) + fib (n - 1)
Start = fib 7

Infix operator:

 (^) infixr 8 :: Int Int -> Int 
 (^) x 0 = 1
 (^) x n = x * x ^ (n-1) 

The type declaration states that the function is a right associative infix operator with priority 8: this states that x*x^(n-1) is equivalent to x*(x^(n-1)) as opposed to (x*x)^(n-1); this operator is pre-defined in the Clean standard environment.

Computation is based on graph rewriting and reduction. Constants such as numbers are graphs and functions are graph rewriting formulas. This, combined with compilation to native code, makes Clean programs relatively fast, even with high abstraction.


  1. Source files (.icl) and project files (.dcl) are converted into Clean's platform independent bytecode (.abc), implemented in C and Clean.
  2. Bytecode is converted to object code (.obj) using C.
  3. object code is linked with other files in the module and the runtime system and converted into a normal executable in Clean.

Earlier Clean system versions were written completely in C, thus avoiding bootstrapping issues.

Clean is available for Microsoft Windows. It is also available with limited input-output capabilities and without the "Dynamics" feature prior to version 2.2, for Apple Macintosh, Solaris and Linux.

Clean is dual licensed: it is available under the terms of the GNU LGPL, and also under a proprietary license.

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