Create a new account

It's simple, and free.

Object Oriented Programming Languages

programming experts and language creators to show their papers in full, and each paper makes a chapter. In this method, the papers examine and analyze and often compare, critique and criticize the rational and the cognitive underpinnings of object-oriented languages, the purpose being to help the reader -- both the novice and the professional -- understand the fundamental concepts of these languages and the design decisions behind them. Each paper tends to begin by giving a historical perspective that analyzes existing object-oriented languages.

This concept is good, since it pays special attention to the concept that no language is ever created out of whole cloth, but is usually designed to improve upon languages that came before.

This allows the authors and the creators of the papers to analyze the key features of subtypes and subclasses, and usually how these are affected and influenced by various styles of lambda calculus. Most of the papers also acknowledge that it is possible to create multidimensional arrays that control and inhabit static and dynamic memory management without falling prey to long parameter lists of procedures and gaining access through local temporary arrays (workspace) and array dimensions had to be passed as parameters.

The creation of global and local multidimensional arrays (with possibly no elements) at run-time, allows safe array handling and readable source codes. The authors of the individual papers seem to concur that object-oriented software designs and languages promise to be more capable and give a new flexibility that will let programmers of the future design languages comprised of individual components selected from a large menu.

Modern object-oriented languages such as C++ or SmallTalk are a boon to developers, but provide no benefit to end users since object systems do not yet talk to each other. Interoperable object models, such as OLE/COM, will make conversant objects possible ...

< Prev Page 2 of 30 Next >

More on Object Oriented Programming Languages...

Loading...
APA     MLA     Chicago
Object Oriented Programming Languages. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 17:56, March 28, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/1693694.html