Difference between revisions of "Portal:SciTech"
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From its very beginning, Pascal has a strong position in science and technology. Pascal's utility in scientific applications is supported by fault prevention strategies (which were built-in from the ground up), a broad spectrum of supported platforms from embedded and mobile systems to mainframes and supercomputers, and by a high execution speed of compiled programs. Modern Pascal implementations including Free Pascal complement Pascal's pole position by integrating state-of-the-art programming paradigms and a plethora of bundled mathematical data types and functions. This diversity is supplemented by multiple third-party libraries and components for highly specialised applications. | From its very beginning, Pascal has a strong position in science and technology. Pascal's utility in scientific applications is supported by fault prevention strategies (which were built-in from the ground up), a broad spectrum of supported platforms from embedded and mobile systems to mainframes and supercomputers, and by a high execution speed of compiled programs. Modern Pascal implementations including Free Pascal complement Pascal's pole position by integrating state-of-the-art programming paradigms and a plethora of bundled mathematical data types and functions. This diversity is supplemented by multiple third-party libraries and components for highly specialised applications. | ||
Revision as of 11:44, 25 February 2017
From its very beginning, Pascal has a strong position in science and technology. Pascal's utility in scientific applications is supported by fault prevention strategies (which were built-in from the ground up), a broad spectrum of supported platforms from embedded and mobile systems to mainframes and supercomputers, and by a high execution speed of compiled programs. Modern Pascal implementations including Free Pascal complement Pascal's pole position by integrating state-of-the-art programming paradigms and a plethora of bundled mathematical data types and functions. This diversity is supplemented by multiple third-party libraries and components for highly specialised applications. This portal provides an overview of applications of Lazarus and Free Pascal for science, research, medicine and technology and a (continuously growing) selection of scientific third-party extensions. |
Related topics
Portals: Databases - SciTech - Hardware and Robotics Categories: FPC in Science and Technology - Chaos Theory - Software for Biomedical Research - TAChart - High-performance computing |
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