Maple whipped cream
On this Wikipedia the language links are at the top maple whipped cream the page across from the article title. Maple is a symbolic and numeric computing environment as well as a multi-paradigm programming language. Maple’s capacity for symbolic computing include those of a general-purpose computer algebra system.
For instance, it can manipulate mathematical expressions and find symbolic solutions to certain problems, such as those arising from ordinary and partial differential equations. Maple is developed commercially by the Canadian software company Maplesoft. The name ‘Maple’ is a reference to the software’s Canadian heritage. Users can enter mathematics in traditional mathematical notation.
Custom user interfaces can also be created. There is support for numeric computations, to arbitrary precision, as well as symbolic computation and visualization. Examples of symbolic computations are given below. 0, which is a W3C format for representing and interpreting mathematical expressions, including their display in web pages.
Maple is based on a small kernel, written in C, which provides the Maple language. Most functionality is provided by libraries, which come from a variety of sources. Different functionality in Maple requires numerical data in different formats. Symbolic expressions are stored in memory as directed acyclic graphs. The standard interface and calculator interface are written in Java. The first concept of Maple arose from a meeting in late 1980 at the University of Waterloo. In 1984, the research group arranged with Watcom Products Inc to license and distribute the first commercially available version, Maple 3.
In 1989, the first graphical user interface for Maple was developed and included with version 4. X11 and Windows versions of the new interface followed in 1990 with Maple V. In 1992, Maple V Release 2 introduced the Maple “worksheet” that combined text, graphics, and input and typeset output. In 1999, with the release of Maple 6, Maple included some of the NAG Numerical Libraries. In 2003, the current “standard” interface was introduced with Maple 9. Between 1995 and 2005 Maple lost significant market share to competitors due to a weaker user interface.