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Trends in object-oriented programming
ACM Computing Surveys, 1996This is a position statement for the workshop on strategic directions in computing research held at MIT in June 1996. It identifies the most promising areas of research in object-oriented technology being frameworks, design patterns, distributed objects, as well as languages and environments.
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Concurrent object-oriented programming
Communications of the ACM, 1990Three significant trends have underscored the central role of concurrency in computing. First, there is increased use of interacting processes by individual users, for example, application programs running on X windows. Second, workstation networks have become a cost-effective mechanism for resource sharing and distributed problem solving. For example,
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The Death of Object-Oriented Programming
2016Modern software systems are increasingly long-lived. In order to gracefully evolve these systems as they address new requirements, developers need to navigate effectively between domain concepts and the code that addresses those domains. One of the original promises of object-orientation was that the same object-oriented models would be used throughout
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Object-oriented programming in C++
ACM SIGCSE Bulletin, 1991This paper describes a course that introduces students to object-oriented design, the C++ language and discreteevent simulation with animated displays. Students come to this course with a Pascal, C and Assembler background and progress through the object-oriented features of C++, completing a simulation project as a major course component. A video-tape
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Object-Oriented Programming on the Network
1999Object-oriented programming techniques have been used with great success for some time. But the techniques of object-oriented programming have been largely confined to the single address space, and have not been applicable to distributed systems. Recent advances in language technology have allowed a change in the way distributed systems are constructed
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Object-oriented Reactive Programming is Not Reactive Object-oriented Programming
2013According to chapter 3 of Abelson & Sussman, there are two fundamentally different ways to organise large systems: according to the objects that live in the system, or according to the streams of values that flow through the system. Even though the notions of "object'' and "stream'' have meanwhile taken many incarnations, the dichotomy still exists in ...
Gonzalez Boix, Elisa +3 more
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