- From: Alexander Johannesen <alexander.johannesen@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 9 Nov 2017 15:17:46 +1100
- To: David Booth <david@dbooth.org>
- Cc: Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAF89bCCUG3JcSv5oO=ivqDFgk04sJQ8EMqiq-wyVbmXwHZnDjA@mail.gmail.com>
Hi, Well, it has been done many times before in localised and modelled ways, the problem really is what interface we would use in order to make it work for all. I once defined an RDF language in Topic Maps. :) Good time, good times. I think a programming language that is constructed around graphs would suffice, but I haven't really seen much that impresses me yet. R can be an interesting avenue, and probably some Python magic is worth looking into, but when it comes down to it, I'd like to see a programming language that isn't based around defining types and arrays or objects, some 5th generation stuff for the high level mixing and constraining of data and flows. But then, how do we interface into that? I suspect there needs to be some kind of new paradigm in working with timed graphs, probably some IDE of sorts, but then, not sure where it would come from. Cheers, Alex On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 2:46 PM, David Booth <david@dbooth.org> wrote: > On 11/08/2017 09:50 PM, Victor Porton wrote: > >> Just a few seconds ago I had a mad idea: >> >> Make a programming language based on RDF rather than on plain text. >> >> Well, this would require many (...) lists to specify the order of >> execution. >> >> What do you think? >> > > Lisp :) > > David Booth > > > -- Information Alchemist / UX consultant / GUI developer for hire http://thinkplot.org | http://www.linkedin.com/in/shelterit
Received on Thursday, 9 November 2017 04:18:13 UTC