

Wolfram Language
Wolfram Language is a symbolic language, deliberately designed with the breadth and unity needed to develop powerful programs quickly. By integrating high-level forms—like Image, GeoPolygon or Molecule—along with advanced superfunctions—such as ImageIdentify or...
Cost / License
- Free
- Proprietary
Application type
Platforms
- Mac
- Windows
- Linux
- Online
- BSD
- openSUSE
- FreeBSD
- OpenSolaris
- NetBSD
- OpenBSD
Features
- Support for scripting
- Ad-free
- Data visualization
- Data analytics
- Symbolic Computation
Tags
- programming
- Data Analysis
- wolfram-language
- computational-language
- jupyter-kernels
- ChatGPT
- geographic-data
- development
Wolfram Language News & Activities
Recent activities
POX added Wolfram Language as alternative to Unison Programming Language- AllMight liked Wolfram Language
POX added Wolfram Language as alternative to Ardos- protmaks added Wolfram Language as alternative to PondPilot
- alt-io liked Wolfram Language
- POX added Wolfram Language as alternative to Positron
POX added Wolfram Language as alternative to Mussel- namdx1987 liked Wolfram Language
- braky added Wolfram Language as alternative to Datalore
- tenter liked Wolfram Language
Wolfram Language information
What is Wolfram Language?
Wolfram Language is a symbolic language, deliberately designed with the breadth and unity needed to develop powerful programs quickly. By integrating high-level forms—like Image, GeoPolygon or Molecule—along with advanced superfunctions—such as ImageIdentify or ApplyReaction—Wolfram Language makes it possible to quickly express complex ideas in computational form.
The Wolfram Language is a proprietary, general high-level multi-paradigm programming language developed by Wolfram Research. It emphasizes symbolic computation, functional programming, and rule-based programming and can employ arbitrary structures and data. It is the programming language of the mathematical symbolic computation program Mathematica.
The Wolfram Language was a part of the initial version of Mathematica in 1988.
The philosophy of Wolfram Language is to build as much knowledge—about algorithms and the world—into the language as possible.
Wolfram Language represents everything—data, formulas, code, graphics, documents, interfaces, etc.—as symbolic expressions, making possible a new level of programming flexibility and power.

