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 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.
Wolfram Language represents everything—data, formulas, code, graphics, documents, interfaces, etc.—as symbolic expressions, making possible a new level of programming flexibility and power.
Wolfram Language, first released in Mathematica in 1988, initiated a revolution in computational mathematics and has continuously expanded into all areas of computation, driving advances in industry and research for more than three decades.