Computer Science An Overview _J. Glenn Brookshear _11th Edition



A subset of the imperative programming languages is the collection of languages known as


scripting languages. These languages are typically used to perform administrative tasks rather than


to develop complex programs. The expression of such a task is known as a script,which explains the


term “scripting language.” For example, the administrator of a computer system might write a script


to describe a sequence of record-keeping activities that should be performed every evening, or the user of a


PC might write a script to direct the execution of a sequence of programs required to read pictures from a digital camera,


index the pictures by date, and store copies of them in an archival storage system. The origin of scripting languages can


be traced to the job control languages of the1960s that were used to direct an operating system


in the scheduling of batch processing jobs (see Section 3.1). Even today, many consider scripting languages to be


languages for directing the execution of other programs, which is a rather restrictive view of current scripting languages.


Examples of scripting languages include Perl and PHP, both of which are popular in controlling server-side Web


applications (see Section 4.3), as well as VBScript, which is a dialect of Visual Basic that was developed by Microsoft


and is used in Windows-specific situations.