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  2. Pokémon Project Studio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pokémon_Project_Studio

    In November 1999, the Red and Blue editions of Pokémon Studio were both among the top ten best-selling PC games of the month. [ 10 ] By mid-2000, Nintendo held a Pokemon ProjectROM Contest, which required contestants to write essays on their two Pokémon characters, with the prizes including the two Pokémon Project Studio CDs. [ 11 ]

  3. Elixir (programming language) - Wikipedia

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

    His goals were to enable higher extensibility and productivity in the Erlang VM while maintaining compatibility with Erlang's ecosystem. [10] [11] Elixir is aimed at large-scale sites and apps. It uses features of Ruby, Erlang, and Clojure to develop a high-concurrency and low-latency language. It was designed to handle large data volumes.

  4. Konami Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konami_Code

    The code is also known as the "Contra Code" and "30 Lives Code", since the code provided the player 30 extra lives in Contra. The code has been used to help novice players progress through the game. [10] [12] The Konami Code was created by Kazuhisa Hashimoto, who was developing the home port of the 1985 arcade game Gradius for the NES.

  5. LFE (programming language) - Wikipedia

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

    Lisp Flavored Erlang (LFE) is a functional, concurrent, garbage collected, general-purpose programming language and Lisp dialect built on Core Erlang and the Erlang virtual machine . LFE builds on Erlang to provide a Lisp syntax for writing distributed, fault-tolerant , soft real-time , non-stop applications.

  6. Source code editors for Erlang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_code_editors_for_Erlang

    Erlang is an open source programming language. Multiple development environments (including IDEs and source code editors with plug-ins adding IDE features) have support for Erlang. Multiple development environments (including IDEs and source code editors with plug-ins adding IDE features) have support for Erlang.

  7. Green thread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_thread

    The Erlang virtual machine has what might be called green processes – they are like operating system processes (they do not share state like threads do) but are implemented within the Erlang Run Time System (erts). These are sometimes termed green threads, but have significant differences [clarification needed] from standard green threads.

  8. BEAM (Erlang virtual machine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BEAM_(Erlang_virtual_machine)

    BEAM is the virtual machine at the core of the Erlang Open Telecom Platform (OTP). [1] BEAM is part of the Erlang Run-Time System (ERTS), which compiles Erlang source code into bytecode, which is then executed on the BEAM. [2] [3] BEAM bytecode files have the .beam file extension. [4]

  9. Gleam (programming language) - Wikipedia

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

    Gleam is a general-purpose, concurrent, functional high-level programming language that compiles to Erlang or JavaScript source code. [2] [7] [8] Gleam is a statically-typed language, [9] which is different from the most popular languages that run on Erlang’s virtual machine BEAM, Erlang and Elixir.