Strongly-Typed Statically-Typed Programming Language
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A Strongly-Typed Statically-Typed Programming Language is a programming language that is both a strongly-typed language and a statically-typed language.
- AKA: Type-Safe Language.
- Example(s):
- C++.
- Java Language.
- Scala.
- Kotlin.
- ...
- Counter-Example(s):
- Perl and JavaScript.
- Go, allows for implicit type conversion in some cases.
- TypeScript, supports optional dynamic typing through its "any" type and the "unknown" type.
- ...
- See: Weakly-Typed Dynamically-Typed Programming Language.
References
2023
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- A strongly-typed statically-typed programming language is a type of programming language that is both strongly-typed and statically-typed.
- It may also be referred to as: Type-safe language.
- Some of its characteristics include:
- It can catch type errors at compile-time, which helps avoid runtime errors.
- It can enforce stricter type rules, which can lead to more reliable software.
- It can require explicit declaration of data types, which helps with code readability and maintainability.
- Associated concepts may include: Dynamic typing, Type inference, Type casting.