Sometime in 2019, MIT Ph.D. student Ajay Brahmakshatriya formulated a simple, though still quite challenging, goal. He wanted to make it possible for people who had expertise in a particular domain—such as climate modeling, bioinformatics, or architecture—to write their own programming languages, so-called domain-specific languages (or DSLs), even if they had little or no experience in creating programming languages.
New software tool provides an easier way to debug any domain-specific programming language
Tech News
-
Highlights
Free Dark Web Monitoring Stamps the $17 Million Credentials Markets
-
Highlights
Smart buildings: What happens to our free will when tech makes choices for us?
-
Apps
Screenshots have generated new forms of storytelling, from Twitter fan fiction to desktop film
-
Highlights
Darknet markets generate millions in revenue selling stolen personal data, supply chain study finds
-
Security
Privacy violations undermine the trustworthiness of the Tim Hortons brand
-
Featured Headlines
Why Tesla’s Autopilot crashes spurred the feds to investigate driver-assist technologies – and what that means for the future of self-driving cars