Slide 2.d: Assemblying and executing the program
Slide 3.b: Types of dynamic programming languages
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Dynamic Programming Languages


Many developers are increasingly using dynamic languages, such as JavaScript, Perl, Python, and Ruby, to boost their effectiveness and productivity and perform complex jobs more quickly and easily, particularly as projects have become increasingly large and complex. Dynamic languages are not new. Languages such as APL and Lisp were developed in the late 1950s. There have been many since then—such as ABAP, Groovy, SAS, and Tcl—with several becoming very popular, as the table shows. The definitions of static and dynamic languages are given as follows:
Dynamic languages are flexible and can let developers write more to-the-point code quickly and easily. Despite the enthusiasm, dynamic languages have their drawbacks and concerns, including many developers' unfamiliarity with them. Moreover, computing has proven to be “a fashion industry with little or no relationship with engineering,” and many new programming approaches are “just something new to try before something newer comes along.”