Difference between revisions of "Programming Languages Project"

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(GRASS-SWIG)
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* Tree::R module in CPAN: http://cpan.org/modules/by-module/Tree/
 
* Tree::R module in CPAN: http://cpan.org/modules/by-module/Tree/
 
* GDAL/OGR has Swig-based Perl interfaces
 
* GDAL/OGR has Swig-based Perl interfaces
 +
* GRASS has prototype Swig-based Perl interfaces
 
* Discussion about gdal, ogr, some Geo, and Gtk2::Ex::Geo modules: http://map.hut.fi/PerlForGeoinformatics/
 
* Discussion about gdal, ogr, some Geo, and Gtk2::Ex::Geo modules: http://map.hut.fi/PerlForGeoinformatics/
 
* Geo-Perl email list: https://list.hut.fi/mailman/listinfo/geo-perl
 
* Geo-Perl email list: https://list.hut.fi/mailman/listinfo/geo-perl

Revision as of 07:27, 27 April 2006

Goals

This project is intended for information about and discussion how different programming languages are used in OSG software and what's available.

A specific interest for this project is to discuss how to enhance or achieve interoperability between libraries and tools written in different languages.

Audience

The contents are inteded for

  • beginning developers who are looking for basic information and pointers,
  • more seasoned developers who may not be well informed what's happening among languages they are not using, and
  • educators, who teach GIS programming and software development.

Libraries

Geospatial software libraries provide the functionalities that belong to general categories of

  • Data management
  • Analysis
  • Visualization

In practical tools the specialized geospatial software have to be linked to general software libraries and toolkits like GUI toolkits, network software, etc.

Interoperability

  • Maintain functionally equivalent libraries in two languages (JTS/GEOS)
  • Use Swig (GDAL, GEOS, GRASS)
  • Use .Net/mono (MapWindow)

Using Swig

  • How to achieve a robust mapping between memory management in low level language and in the interface language?

The problem is that in low level language the programmer usually explicitly deletes an object (smart pointers are an exception) and in a scripting language the programmer usually doesn't. The binding should somehow make sure that all low level objects exist as long as they are needed but not longer. Different schemes exist in both worlds for managing this, but their interaction may make the problem even worse, especially when a single binding code (swig) should take care of it.

This problem exists for example in GDAL, where things like

band = gdal::Open('filename').GetRasterBand(0)

usually result in bad objects.

C, C++, Fortran and other "low-level" languages

  • Many fundamental libraries are written in these languages
  • These can be wrapped efficiently with Swig

Java

Java is a hybrid in the sense that it's used for fundamental libraries but it is also often preferred also for its high-level features (strong OO). Notable Java OSG include JTS, uDig, ...

Scripting languages

Scripting languages take the burden of memory management and compilation and linking off from the developer.

Perl

todo:

  • Perl bindings for GEOS

PHP

PHP stands for "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor" and is a widely-used Open Source general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for Web development and can be embedded into HTML. Its syntax draws upon C, Java, and Perl, and is easy to learn. The main goal of the language is to allow web developers to write dynamically generated webpages quickly, but you can do much more with PHP. (from the PHP manual preface)

Python

R

R is a language for statistical computing.

Ruby