A programming paradigm is a way or style of how computer programs are written.
But the degree to which side effects are used depends on the programming paradigm.
In computer science, the standard swap or three point turn is a programming paradigm that exchanges the values of two variables.
A programming paradigm is a fundamental style of computer programming.
The various programming paradigms address the issue of cross-cutting concerns to different degrees.
Logic programming is one of the 4 main programming paradigms.
In 1967, the Simula language introduced the object-oriented programming paradigm.
Another objective was to integrate the Object-oriented programming paradigm well.
For further discussion and comparison of generic programming paradigms, see.
It is a scalable system which supports many programming paradigms.