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TXL is a versatile, general-purpose programming language developed at the University of Toronto. It is widely used in academia, industry, and government for software engineering, systems analysis, and modeling. TXL has been used in a wide variety of domains, including: -Compilers -Programming language interpreters -Operating systems -Databases -Network protocols -The World Wide Web -Artificial intelligence -Natural language processing -Robotics -Bioinformatics TXL is known for its concise and clear syntax, its support for multiple programming paradigms, and its ability to generate code in multiple languages. TXL is an imperative, procedural, and object-oriented programming language. It has a strong static type system and supports exception handling. TXL also has a rich set of built-in data types and operators, and supports user-defined types and operators. TXL is a compiled language. The TXL compiler generates machine code for a virtual machine, which can be interpreted or compiled for a specific architecture. TXL has been used in a wide variety of projects, including: -The development of the Java programming language -The development of the .NET Framework -The development of the Android operating system -The development of the Firefox web browser -The development of the Emacs text editor