Linux is a fascinating operating system because it lets any user participate in its development. The variety of available languages, however, can be confusing to beginning Linux developers. This document lists the most common options for everyday development and states some key facts about them. (Well, ``most common'' and ``key'' as I perceive them.) My aim is neither to review the languages nor to determine which one is the best. Each language is a tool that fits some jobs and some tastes. You can get further (often conflicting) information easily, if you ask around or keep your ears open. The Links sections in this document will give you some pointers for your own research.
There is a plethora of languages and libraries for Linux, so this document only covers the most common languages and GUI toolkits at the moment. Also note that the languages and GUI toolkits are seen from the Linux point of view, their features on other platforms are not discussed or implied.
This document is a recent addition to the LDP, so there has not been opportunity for much community feedback. However, it is released in hopes that it will prove useful for people interested in programming under Linux. A question mark in the tables indicates lack of information. If you can fill it in, please contact the author.
Copyright (c) 2000 Risto Varanka.
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THIS DOCUMENT COVERS A LARGE AND CONSTANTLY CHANGING DOMAIN. THEREFORE, THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS DOCUMENT MAY BE INCORRECT OR OUTDATED. ALL USE OF THIS DOCUMENT AND ALL INFORMATION CONTAINED IN IT IS AT YOUR OWN RISK. THE AUTHOR DOES NOT GIVE ANY WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE, EITHER EXPLICIT OR IMPLIED.
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Author's web site can be found at http://www.helsinki.fi/~rvaranka/.
I am thankful to several people who commented on language issues. These conversations have given me a better view of the different languages, and I hope future conversations will allow this mini-HOWTO to mature over time. Especially I would like to thank the people at the IRCNet channel #linux: Morphy, Bluesmurf, Vadim, Zonk^, Rikkus and others whose names I have forgotten. Thanks go also to Stig Erik Sandoe for helpful comments.
Exhaustive lists of Linux development libraries and tools:
The Hacker FAQ by Eric S. Raymond is another interesting text for novice Linux developers. It concentrates on some cultural and psychological aspects of open source development.
Other LDP documents covering general programming subjects include the Reading List HOWTO and the Linux Programmer's Guide - several more have been written on specific subjects.
A common name of the language.
Indicates how well suited the language is for people with little programming experience. A language marked with ``yes'' should be viable for a beginner's first programming language.
How fast your applications are likely to run when you put them into production use. Performance depends more on your algorithmic programming skills than the actual language. As a rule of thumb, C, C++ and Fortran are sometimes necessary because they can offer better performance than other languages - at other times they might be unwieldy for the desired purpose. (One idea for ``benchmarking'' the languages would be to implement a simple sorting algorithm in all of them and compare running times. Anybody want to help me with this?)
Object-oriented programming is an important programming paradigm that is gaining popularity. In object oriented programming, data structures and algorithms are integrated into units, often called classes. OOP is often contrasted with procedural programming (which uses separate algorithms and data structures). It is not strictly dependent on language: you can do OOP in languages not listed as such (C for example), and program in the procedural style in languages that are listed as OOP. I've listed as OOP languages that have special features or add-ons to facilitate OOP. Functional languages (Lisp for example) are a bit different breed - among other things, functional programming is a superset of OOP. Logic programming (Prolog), also called declarative programming, on the other hand, is not related to the other types of programming in a similar sense.
More dependent on the tools you are using than the actual language. There is a HOWTO on GUI development tools for Linux, although it's out of date. With a good graphical tool you can do RAD. Sometimes RAD is based on code reuse as well, so free software could provide a good starting point.
Mentions fields of programming the language is most often used in. Other good (and bad) uses exist, but they are less typical.
Additional information on the language, like capacities and dialects.
PERL Beginner: Yes - OOP: Yes Examples: Scripting, sysadmin, www Comments: Powerful for handling text and strings, very popular Python Beginner: Yes - OOP: Yes Examples: Scripting, application scripting, www Comments: TCL Beginner: Yes - OOP: No Examples: Scripting, sysadmin, applications Comments: PHP Beginner: Yes - OOP: Yes Examples: Www Comments: Popular for web databases Java Beginner: Yes - OOP: Yes Examples: Cross-platform applications, www Comments: Lisp Beginner: Yes - OOP: Functional Examples: Emacs modes (for elisp), AI Comments: Variants Elisp, Clisp and Scheme Fortran Beginner: No - OOP: No Examples: Mathematical applications Comments: Variants f77 and f90/95 C Beginner: No - OOP: No Examples: System programming, applications Comments: Very popular C++ Beginner: No - OOP: Yes Examples: Applications Comments:
Shells are an important programming environment, too. I haven't covered them because I don't understand the field very thoroughly yet. Knowledge of shells is important for anyone who works on Linux regularly, more so for system administrators. There are similarities between shell programming and scripting - often they can achieve the same goals, and you have the option of choosing between native shell and a scripting language. Among the most popular shells are bash, tcsh, csh, ksh and zsh. You can get basic information on your shell with the man command, man bash for example.
Other languages of note: AWK, SED, Smalltalk, Eiffel, ADA, Prolog, assembler, Objective C, Logo, Pascal (p2c converter)
Common name or abbreviation of the toolkit.
Whether the toolkit is suitable for a newbie programmer.
Different licenses for different GUI toolkits have practical significance. GTK+ and TK licenses allow you to develop both open source and closed source applications without paying for a license. Motif license requires payment, while the QT license requires payment only if you write closed source programs.
The language that is most often used with the toolkit.
Other languages which can use the toolkit.
Applications that use the toolkit.
Additional information on the toolkit.
Library | Beginner | License | Language | Bindings | Examples | Comments |
TK | Yes | Free | TCL | PERL, Python, others | make xconfig, TKDesk | |
GTK+ | No | Free (LGPL) | C | PERL, C++, Python, many others | GNOME, Gimp | |
QT | No | Free for open source | C++ | Python, PERL, C, others? | KDE | |
Motif | No | Non-free | C/C++ | Python, others? | Netscape, Wordperfect | |