Hello CS/IT Engineering students, I am sharing the Principles of Programming Language PDF handwritten revision lecture notes, book for Computer science/IT engineering course. These handwritten revision notes for Principles of Programming Language will come in handy during your CS/IT semester exams and will help you score more marks.
List of topics covered in Principles of Programming Language PDF handwritten notes, book for CS/IT Engineering:
List of topics covered in Principles of Programming Language PDF handwritten notes, book for CS/IT Engineering:
- UNIT- I: Syntax and semantics: Evolution of programming languages, describing syntax, context, free grammars, attribute grammars, describing semantics, lexical analysis, parsing, recursive – decent bottom-up parsing
- UNIT -II: Data, data types, and basic statements: Names, variables, binding, type checking, scope, scope rules, lifetime and garbage collection, primitive data types, strings, array types, associative arrays, record types, union types, pointers and references, Arithmetic expressions, overloaded operators, type conversions, relational and boolean expressions , assignment statements , mixed mode assignments, control structures – selection, iterations, branching, guarded Statements
- UNIT -III: Subprograms and implementations: Design issues, local referencing, parameter passing, overloaded methods, generic methods, design issues for functions, semantics of call and return, implementing simple subprograms, stack and dynamic local variables, nested subprograms, blocks, dynamic scoping
- UNIT -IV: Object- orientation, concurrency, and event handling: Design issues for OOP languages, implementation of object, oriented constructs, concurrency, semaphores, Monitors, message passing, threads, statement level concurrency, exception handling, event handling
- UNIT -V: Functional programming languages: Introduction to lambda calculus, fundamentals of functional programming languages, Programming with Scheme, – Programming with ML,
- UNIT -VI: Logic programming languages: Programming with Prolog, multi-paradigm languages