However, Kite initially only supported Python completions because its former approach required it to build a dedicated semantic engine for each programming language. Kite promises to adapt to a developer's style of coding on the fly and suggest multiple tokens – the equivalent of words – without developers first having to manually define the structure of a 'sentence'. SEE: Hiring Kit: Python developer (TechRepublic Premium) Kite CEO Adam Smith tells ZDNet it will also roll out support for PHP, Ruby and Shell in the next few weeks. They're almost all among RedMonk's list of the top 20 most popular programming languages. With the 11 new languages, Kite now supports 13 languages. The newly supported languages consist of Java, C, C++, C#, TypeScript, Kotlin, Objective C, Scala, Go, HTML/CSS, and Less. Kite, the maker of an AI-powered tool that automatically completes lines of code, has added support for 11 new languages beyond Python and JavaScript.
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