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  2. Kotlin (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotlin_(programming_language)

    In 2018, Kotlin was the fastest growing language on GitHub, with 2.6 times more developers compared to 2017. [53] It is the fourth most loved programming language according to the 2020 Stack Overflow Developer Survey. [54] Kotlin was also awarded the O'Reilly Open Source Software Conference Breakout Award for 2019. [55]

  3. Coroutine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coroutine

    The paper "Revisiting Coroutines" [5] published in 2009 proposed term full coroutine to denote one that supports first-class coroutine and is stackful. Full Coroutines deserve their own name in that they have the same expressive power as one-shot continuations and delimited continuations. Full coroutines are either symmetric or asymmetric.

  4. Futures and promises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futures_and_promises

    Kotlin, however kotlin.native.concurrent.Future is only usually used when writing Kotlin that is intended to run natively [35] Nim; Oxygene; Oz version 3 [36] Python concurrent.futures, since 3.2, [37] as proposed by the PEP 3148, and Python 3.5 added async and await [38] R (promises for lazy evaluation, still single threaded) Racket [39] Raku [40]

  5. Pipeline (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipeline_(software)

    In software engineering, a pipeline consists of a chain of processing elements (processes, threads, coroutines, functions, etc.), arranged so that the output of each element is the input of the next. The concept is analogous to a physical pipeline.

  6. sbt (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SBT_(software)

    sbt (originally simple build tool, nowadays stands for nothing [4]) is an open-source build tool which can build Java, Scala, and Kotlin projects.It aims to streamline the procedure of constructing, compiling, testing, and packaging applications, libraries, and frameworks.

  7. Android Studio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Android_Studio

    Android Studio is the official [6] integrated development environment (IDE) for Google's Android operating system, built on JetBrains' IntelliJ IDEA software and designed specifically for Android development. [7] It is available for download on Windows, macOS and Linux based operating systems. [8]

  8. ZeroMQ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZeroMQ

    ZeroMQ (also spelled ØMQ, 0MQ or ZMQ) is an asynchronous messaging library, aimed at use in distributed or concurrent applications. It provides a message queue, but unlike message-oriented middleware, a ZeroMQ system can run without a dedicated message broker; the zero in the name is for zero broker. [3]

  9. Fiber (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_(computer_science)

    In computer science, a fiber is a particularly lightweight thread of execution.. Like threads, fibers share address space.However, fibers use cooperative multitasking while threads use preemptive multitasking.