<<Up     Contents

Whitespace (programming language)

Redirected from Whitespace programming language

Whitespace is a programming language developed by Edwin Brady[?] and Chris Morris in 2003. The interpreter ignores any non whitespace characters. Only spaces, tabs and newlines are considered syntax.

The language itself is an imperative, stack based language. The virtual machine on which programs run has a stack and a heap. The programmer is free to push arbitrary width integers onto the stack (only integers, currently there is no implementation of floating point or real numbers). The user can also access the heap by the as a permanent store of variables and data structures.

See also: Brainfuck programming language


For other uses of Whitespace, see Whitespace and Whitespace_(art)[?]

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump