WEB

This article is about the computer programming system. For the World Wide Web, see World Wide Web. For the Bible translation, see World English Bible. For the women artists network, see West-East Bag. For other uses, see web.

WEB is a computer programming system created by Donald E. Knuth as the first implementation of what he called "literate programming": the idea that one could create software as works of literature, by embedding source code inside descriptive text, rather than the reverse (as is common practice in most programming languages), in an order that is convenient for exposition to human readers, rather than in the order demanded by the compiler.

WEB consists of two secondary programs: TANGLE, which produces compilable Pascal code from the source texts, and WEAVE, which produces nicely-formatted, printable documentation using TeX.

CWEB is a version of WEB for the C programming language, while noweb is a separate literate programming tool, which is inspired by WEB (as reflected in the name) and which is language agnostic.

The most significant programs written in WEB are TeX and Metafont. Modern TeX distributions use another program Web2C to convert WEB source to C.

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/30/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.