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Home/ Questions/Q 1032053
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T14:01:34+00:00 2026-05-16T14:01:34+00:00

It seems that most new programming languages that have appeared in the last 20

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It seems that most new programming languages that have appeared in the last 20 years have been written in C. This makes complete sense as C can be seen as a sort of portable assembly language. But what I’m curious about is whether this has constrained the design of the languages in any way. What prompted my question was thinking about how the C stack is used directly in Python for calling functions. Obviously the programming language designer can do whatever they want in whatever language they want, but it seems to me that the language you choose to write your new language in puts you in a certain mindset and gives you certain shortcuts that are difficult to ignore. Are there other characteristics of these languages that come from being written in that language (good or bad)?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T14:01:34+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 2:01 pm

    Even with a C implementation, you’re surprisingly free in terms of implementation. For example, chicken scheme uses C as an intermediate, but still manages to use the stack as a nursery generation in its garbage collector.

    That said, there are some cases where there are constraints. Case in point: The GHC haskell compiler has a perl script called the Evil Mangler to alter the GCC-outputted assembly code to implement some important optimizations. They’ve been moving to internally-generated assembly and LLVM partially for that reason. That said, this hasn’t constrained the language design – only the compiler’s choice of available optimizations.

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