Project Verona
Project Verona is an experimental research programming language developed by Microsoft and aimed at dealing with memory situations to make other programming languages safer.[2][1]
| Paradigm | Safe infrastructure programming | 
|---|---|
| Family | Rust-like | 
| Designed by | Microsoft Research, Imperial College London | 
| First appeared | 2019 | 
| Platform | Cross-platform | 
| OS | Linux, Windows, Darwin | 
| License | MIT License | 
| Filename extensions | .verona | 
| Website | www | 
| Influenced by | |
| Rust, Cyclone, Pony[1] | |
The project is being supported by C# project manager Mads Torgensen[3] and Microsoft Research Cambridge research software engineer Juliana Franco.[4] Project Verona is also being aided by academics at Imperial College London.[1] Unlike in Rust where the ownership model based on a single object, it is based on groups of objects in Verona.[4]
According to Microsoft, the goal of the project is to create a safer platform for memory management.[2]
Project Verona is open source released under MIT License and is under active development on GitHub.[5]
See also
    
    
References
    
- Tung, Liam. "Microsoft opens up Rust-inspired Project Verona programming language on GitHub". ZDNet.
- Jones, Luke (January 17, 2020). "Microsoft's Rust-Based Project Verona Reaches Open Source on GitHub". WinBuzzer.
- Tung, Liam. "Microsoft: Here's why we love programming language Rust and kicked off Project Verona". ZDNet.
- Tung, Liam. "Microsoft: We're creating a new Rust-like programming language for secure coding". ZDNet.
- "GitHub - microsoft/verona: Research programming language for concurrent ownership". GitHub.
External links
    
    
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