Emerald (programming language)
Emerald is a distributed, object-oriented programming language developed in the 1980s by Andrew P. Black, Norman C. Hutchinson, Eric B. Jul, and Henry M. Levy, in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Washington.[1]
Paradigm | object-oriented |
---|---|
Designed by | Andrew P. Black, Norman C. Hutchinson, Eric B. Jul, Henry M. Levy |
First appeared | 1980s |
Typing discipline | strong, static |
Website | www |
Influenced by | |
Pascal, Simula, Smalltalk | |
Influenced | |
Java, Singularity |
A simple Emerald program can create an object and move it around the system:
const Kilroy ← object Kilroy process const origin ← locate self const up ← origin.getActiveNodes for e in up const there ← e.getTheNode move self to there end for move self to origin end process end Kilroy
Emerald was designed to support high performance distribution, location, and high performance of objects, to simplify distributed programming, to exploit information hiding, and to be a small language.
References
- Black, Andrew P.; Hutchinson, Norman C.; Jul, Eric; Levy, Henry M. (1 January 2007). "The Development of the Emerald Programming Language". Proceedings of the third ACM SIGPLAN conference on History of programming languages - HOPL III. ACM. pp. 11–1–11-51. doi:10.1145/1238844.1238855. ISBN 978-1-59593-766-7.
External links
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