Object-Oriented Turing
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Paradigm | multi-paradigm: object-oriented, procedural, concurrent |
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Designed by | Ric Holt |
Developer | Ric Holt |
First appeared | 1991 |
Typing discipline | static, manifest |
OS | Cross-platform: Sun-4, MIPS, RS-6000 |
Website | {{ |
Influenced by | |
Turing |
Object-Oriented Turing is an extension of the Turing programming language and a replacement for Turing Plus created by Ric Holt[1][2] of the University of Toronto, Canada, in 1991. It is imperative, object-oriented, and concurrent. It has modules, classes, single inheritance, processes, exception handling, and optional machine-dependent programming.
There is an integrated development environment under the X Window System and a demo version.[citation needed] Versions exist for Sun-4, MIPS, RS-6000, NeXTSTEP, Windows 95 and others.
References
This article is based on material taken from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing prior to 1 November 2008 and incorporated under the "relicensing" terms of the GFDL, version 1.3 or later.
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