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Language peer sets for OBLIQ: United Kingdom↑ United Kingdom/1993↑ Designed 1993 ↑ 1990s languages ↑ Fifth generation↑ Post-Cold War↑ Genus Actor ↑ Specialised Languages ↑ Actor↑ Autopoeitic↑ Object-oriented ↑ Actor/1993↑ Autopoeitic/1993↑ Object-oriented/1993↑ Actor/United Kingdom↑ Autopoeitic/United Kingdom↑ Object-oriented/United Kingdom↑ Specialised Languages ↑ Specialised Languages/1993↑ Specialised Languages/uk ↑
OO language for distributed objectsalternate simple viewCountry: United Kingdom Designed 1993 Published: 1993 Genus: Actor Sammet category: Specialised Languages Lexically-scoped untyped interpreted language that supports distributed OO computation. An Obliq computation may involve multiple threads of control within an address space, multiple address spaces on a machine, heterogenous machines over a local network, and multiple networks over the internet. Obliq objects have state and are local to a site. Obliq computations can roam over the network, while maintaining network connections. Luca Cardelli, 1993. Luca Cardelli, 1993. A distributed object-oriented scripting language. Small, statically scoped, untyped, higher order, and concurrent. State is local to an address space, while computation can migrate over the network. The distributed computation mechanism is based on Modula-3 network objects. People: Structures: Related languages
References: in [POPL 1995] (1995) [ACM SIGACT-SIGPLAN] Proc. of the 22nd Annual ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, San Francisco, January 1995. in [POPL 1995] (1995) [ACM SIGACT-SIGPLAN] Proc. of the 22nd Annual ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, San Francisco, January 1995. in (2000) Concurrency: Practice and Experience 2000 v12 Resources Search in: Google Google scholar World Cat Yahoo Overture DBLP Monash bib NZ IEEE  ACM portal CiteSeer CSB ncstrl jstor Bookfinder |