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        • Computer Systems Series
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        • Research Directions in Object-Oriented Programming
        Research Directions in Object-Oriented Programming

        Computer Systems Series

        Research Directions in Object-Oriented Programming

        Edited by Gul Agha, David Beech, Daniel G. Bobrow, Ole-Johan Dahl, Joseph A. Goguen, Brent Hailpern, Kenneth M. Kahn, Ole Lehrmann Madsen, David Maier, Andrea Skarra, Harold L. Ossher, Steven Reiss, Herbert Schwetman, Reid Smith, Alan Snyder, Peter Wegner and Stanley Zdonik

        • Hardcover

        500 pp.,

        • Hardcover
        • 9780262192644
        • Published: October 9, 1987
        • Publisher: The MIT Press

        $75.00

        Out of print

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        • Description
        • Author(s)

        Once a radical notion, object-oriented programming is one of today's most active research areas.

        Once a radical notion, object-oriented programming is one of today's most active research areas. It is especially well suited to the design of very large software projects involving many programmers all working on the same project. The original contributions in this book will provide researchers and students in programming languages, databases, and programming semantics with the most complete survey of the field available. Broad in scope and deep in its examination of substantive issues, the book focuses on the major topics of object-oriented languages, models of computation, mathematical models, object-oriented databases, and object-oriented environments. The object-oriented languages include Beta, the Scandinavian successor to Simula (a chapter by Bent Kristensen, whose group has had the longest experience with object-oriented programming, reveals how that experience has shaped the group's vision today); CommonObjects, a Lisp-based language with abstraction; Actors, a low-level language for concurrent modularity; and Vulcan, a Prolog-based concurrent object-oriented language. New computational models of inheritance, composite objects, block-structure layered systems, and classification are covered, and theoretical papers on functional object-oriented languages and object-oriented specification are included in the section on mathematical models. The three chapters on object-oriented databases (including David Maier's "Development and Implementation of an Object-Oriented Database Management System," which spans the programming and database worlds by integrating procedural and representational capability and the requirements of multi-user persistent storage) and the two chapters on object-oriented environments provide a representative sample of good research in these two important areas.

        Research Directions in Object-Oriented Programming is included in the Computer Systems series, edited by Herb Schwetman.

        Gul Agha is Director of the Open Systems Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science.

        Daniel G. Bobrow is a Research Fellow in the Intelligent Systems Laboratory, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, editor-in-chief of the Journal of Artificial Intelligence, and Chair of the Governing Board of the Cognitive Science Society.

        Reid Smith is Director of the Schlumberger Laboratory for Computer Science.

        Peter Wegner is Professor in the Department of Computer Science at Brown University.

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