Åmål is a Municipality in Västra Götaland County, in western Sweden. The municipality covers an area of 481.0 km². Of the total population of 12,840 (2000 estimate), 6,346 are male, and 6,494 are female. The population density of the community is 27 inhabitants per km². It received its city charter in 1643. The Kingdom of Sweden (Swedish: Konungariket Sverige listen) is a Nordic country in Scandinavia, in Northern Europe. ... Events January 21 - Abel Tasman discovers Tonga May 14 - Four year-old France upon the death of his father, Louis XIII. May 19 - Battle of Rocroi: French victory over the Spanish at Rocroi, France. ...
The movie Fucking Åmål is set there (but was actually shot in Trollhättan) and depicts it as a relatively boring and "normal" municipality. Fucking Åmål (variously censored and distributed in certain countries as Show Me Love, Raus Aus Åmål, Descubriendo el Amor, Amigas de Colegio etc. ... Waterfalls in Trollhättan Trollhättan is a Municipality in Västra Götaland County, in western Sweden. ...
See also: Dalia Dalia or Dalsland, is a historical Province or landskap in the south west of Sweden. ...
ML is a programming language originally developed at the University of Edinburgh around twenty years ago.
ML is a high-level language that abstracts away from the machine so that the programmer doesn't have to worry about low-level details like memory management, data representation and pointer chasing.
ML is particularly good for language-processing, hence its widespread use amongst the research community in compilers, interpreters, program analysis tools, theorem provers and formal verifiers.
ML has higher-order functions: functions can be passed as arguments, stored in data structures, and returned as results of function calls.
ML supports information hiding, so that one can implement a data type whose representation is hidden by an interface that just exports functions to construct and operate on the type.
The ML language is clearly specified by The Definition of Standard ML (Revised) (Milner, Tofte, Harper, MacQueen, MIT Press, 1997), which defines the language in 93 pages of mathematical notation and English prose.