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         Smalltalk Programming:     more books (104)
  1. Smalltalk V (Object-Oriented Programming Systems (OOPS)) - 4 Booklet Set - Communications Application Pack, EGA/VGA Color Extension Pack, Goodies #2. Goodies #3 - IBM Version (Object-Oriented Programming System (OOPS))
  2. Object Oriented Programming With Smalltalk/V by Dusko Savic, 1991
  3. Object Oriented Programming with Smalltalk by Marchesi, 1994
  4. An exemplar based Smalltalk (SCS-TR. Carleton University. School of Computer Science) by David A Thomas, 1986
  5. Smalltalk / V Object Oriented Programming System (OOPS) (Tutorial and Programming Handbook) by None, 1987
  6. A Taste of Smalltalk by Ted Kaehler, Dave Patterson, 1986-05
  7. Smalltalk-80: Bits of History, Words of Advice (Addison-Wesley series in computer science)
  8. Smalltalk / V : Tutorial and Programming Handbook by Editors; Digitalk Inc., 1986-01-01
  9. Smalltalk/V: Tutorial and Programming Handbook by Author not stated, 1986
  10. Class-Based Programming Languages: Java, C++, Python, Eiffel, Smalltalk, Ruby, Simula, Common Lisp, Oberon, Clu, Objective-C, Squeak, Sather

81. Cetus Links: 19,498 Links On Objects And Components / Smalltalk
smalltalk is an objectoriented programming language because everything that a smalltalk programmer deals with is an
http://www.cetus-links.org/oo_smalltalk.html
Object-Oriented Language : Smalltalk

82. Programming Language Comparison
Table compares popular objectoriented languages Eiffel, smalltalk, Ruby, Java, C++, Python, Perl, Visual Basic.
http://www.jvoegele.com/software/langcomp.html
jvoegele.com Programmer's Corner > Programming Language Comparison
Programming Language Comparison
by Jason Voegele What follows is my personal evaluation and comparison of many popular programming languages. It is intended to provide very high-level information about the respective languages to anyone who is trying to decide which language(s) to learn or to use for a particular project. You can find a similar comparisons from Google Note: N/A indicates that a topic or feature is not applicable to the language. Eiffel Smalltalk Ruby Java C# C++ Python Perl Visual Basic Object-Orientation Pure Pure Pure Hybrid Hybrid Hybrid / Multi-Paradigm Hybrid Add-On / Hybrid Partial Support Static / Dynamic Typing Static Dynamic Dynamic Static Static Static Dynamic Dynamic Static Generic Classes Yes N/A N/A No No Yes N/A N/A No Inheritance Multiple Single Single class, multiple "mixins" Single class, multiple interfaces Single class, multiple interfaces Multiple Multiple Multiple None Feature Renaming Yes No Yes No No No No No No Method Overloading No No No Yes Yes Yes No No No Operator Overloading Yes Yes?

83. Jan01: Table Of Contents
Take the pure object orientation of smalltalk, remove the quirky syntax and reliance on a workspace. Add the convenience and power of Perl, but without the special cases and magic conversions. Give it a clean syntax based partly on Eiffel, add a few concepts from Scheme, CLU, Sather, Common Lisp. You end up with Ruby. Dr. Dobb's Journal
http://www.ddj.com/articles/2001/0101/0101b/0101b.htm

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Scripting Languages
+ 25th Anniversary Issue
FEATURES
by Eugene Eric Kim DDJ 's role in that revolution.
PROGRAMMING IN RUBY
by Dave Thomas and Andy Hunt
Ruby is a freely available pure, untyped, object-oriented language. Dave and Andy show how to use the language, while Yukihiro Matsumoto (Ruby's creator) adds a note on why he developed it. Additional resources include ruby.txt (listings).
by Ahmad Abualsamid PHP 4 is a server-side scripting language that runs on almost any OS used for web hosting. It also supports numerous web servers including Microsoft's Internet Information Server (IIS), Apache, and AOL Server, and it has native support for multiple database engines. Additional resources include php.txt

84. Fabrik - A Visual Programming Environment
Kit of objectoriented computational and user-interface components that can be 'wired' together to build new components and applications; diagrams use bidirectional dataflow links as shorthand for multiple paths of flow.
http://users.ipa.net/~dwighth/smalltalk/Fabrik/Fabrik.html
Fabrik
A Visual Programming Environment
Dan Ingalls, Scott Wallace, Yu-Ying Chow, Frank Ludolph, Ken Doyle
Apple Computer Inc.
20525 Mariani Avenue
Cupertino, CA. 95014 OOPSLA '88 Conference Proceedings
SIGPLAN Notices
Volume 23, Number 11, November 1988
Abstract
Fabrik is a visual programming environment - a kit of computational and user-interface components that can be "wired" together to build new components and useful applications. Fabrik diagrams utilize bidirectional dataflow connections as a shorthand for multiple paths of flow. Built on object-oriented foundations, Fabrik components can compute arbitrary objects as outputs. Music and animation can be programmed in this way and the user interface can even be extended by generating graphical structures that depend on other data. An interactive type system guards against meaningless connections. As with simple dataflow, each Fabrik component can be compiled into an object with access methods corresponding to each of the possible paths of data propagation. Kits and Concrete Manipulation A kit is a set of primitive components, together with a framework for connecting the components to do new and interesting things. If objects built with the kit can in turn be used to augment the original set of components, then the range of application becomes very large, limited only by the capability of the primitive components and the manner of their interconnection. The kit approach has been around for a long time, manifest in the subroutine libraries of the last three decades. However, the ability to browse through, and experiment with the available components was extremely primitive, owing to the textual orientation of underlying computing environments during those early years.

85. Lukas Renggli: Home
Personal info, music. Publications. Photos gallery. Author's programming tools and games (with source by reqiest). programming in HP48, Pascal, smalltalk. Scripts for Zope content management system.
http://renggli.freezope.org/
Home Personal Gallery Applications ... Links Navigation Menu Home Applications Gallery Links ...
Books

A collection of some book I presonally like have been added to the 'personal' section. Lidernen
Some new pictures of a skiing tour in Winter 2000 have been added to the gallery. You might want sending one as a free postcard to your friends. More
nedstatbasic("ABxRLQ25K3HXxj7szSUuXnQDedHg", 0);
Welcome
On these pages you will find different things. The main topics are:
  • Applications
    In this section you are able to download some of my freeware applications.
    Gallery

    Check out the gallery, if you want to see pictures that I've taken while traveling around. You might even send any picture as postcards to your friends.
    Links

    This is small, but well sorted collection of links to interesting stuff outside this page. If you have suggestions, please send me your links.
    Personal
    In this section you'll find personal things about me and some of my hobbies. Programming Developing programs, creating web-pages and playing around with different computer systems is my life. This section allows you to have a look at some examples and download the source-code.
I hope you enjoy your visit. If you like my pages please leave your comments in my

86. Bistro
This paper introduces the Bistro programming language and compares it to smalltalk and Java. By Nik Boyd.
http://home.labridge.com/~nikboyd/papers/bistro/intro/
Nik Boyd
Table 1. Language Features Language Model Bistro has a declarative language model. Name Spaces Classes Metaclasses Bistro supports the definition of metaclasses like those found in Smalltalk. Types Bistro supports the definition and use of first-class interfaces (as types). Metatypes Just as each Bistro class has a corresponding metaclass, each type has a metatype. Access Controls public, protected, private. Decorations Bistro also supports: abstract, final, synchronized, native, static. In-line Variables Bistro supports in-line variable declaration and initialization. Type Specifications Bistro variable and argument type specifications are optional. Natural Methods Bistro natural methods closely resemble those of Smalltalk. Primitive Methods Interoperability Comments Blocks Adapters Bistro uses a special message idiom for defining anonymous inner classes. Threads Bistro blocks support the fork Exceptions Migration Bistro includes a utility for converting Smalltalk class sources to Bistro.
LANGUAGE MODEL
Traditionally, Smalltalk systems were built in the context of an object memory

87. Welcome To The Ege Family's Activity Page
Experimental objectoriented programming language; looks and feels much like the original smalltalk, adds features to specify access to object detail.
http://tools.fiu.edu/
Welcome to the Ege family's activity page Pictures Lucas as is !
Maultaschen Machen

Whitewater Rafting

Mama's Paella Party
...
old house
The Big Red Please visit our other websites:
Athena
Valentina
Kiwanis Horses and Handicapped
Calendar Mail © 2003 Ege Consulting, Inc.

88. Kyles Home Page
Information on Design Patterns, Java and J2EE programming, ObjectOriented Design and smalltalk.
http://members.aol.com/kgb1001001/
htmlAdWH('7003435', '120', '30'); htmlAdWH('7002528', '234', '60'); Main Create Edit Help
Kyle Brown's Home Page
I work for IBM , where I'm Senior Technical Staff Member with the IBM Software Services for WebSphere group. We provide services and consulting to support IBM's WebSphere product and help customers in building complex e-business applications in Java. Before I joined IBM, I had worked for Knowledge Systems Corporation for over seven years teaching Smalltalk , Java , and Object-Oriented Design to clients. My current interests include Patterns and finding patterns in frameworks. I have also worked a lot with Java Servlets Java Beans and Enterprise JavaBeans . I've written quite a few papers and Articles over the years as part of my consulting practice, mostly about patterns in one form or another. When I'm not at work I'm usually either teaching classes on OO programming topics at NC State University , or spending time with my lovely and long-suffering wife, Ann. I welcome a discussion of my personal interests . If you're interested this is where you can find my resume . I am now proudly a bartender (odd, since I'm actually a

89. Tutorials On HTML And Web Design, Smalltalk, And C. For Students Of T117, T170,
Information, links, tutorials and advice for students of T171, M206, T170, T223 and TT280 on web design, C programming, smalltalk and HTML. Includes specific tutorials for some assignments.
http://www.tutorials4u.com/
Free Smalltalk, C, HTML and Web site design tutorials. Suitable for Open University courses M206, T223, T117, T170, and TT280, and North Carolina State University course CSC517 students.
Tutorials4u.com
Tutorials4u.com tutorials
are suitable for beginners to programming in HTML and Web Design, Smalltalk and C and of particular interest to students of the following courses T171, T170, TT280, M206, T223 of the Open University, and CSC517 at Carolina State University. All are written by John McGuinn.
A brand new series of tutorials on programming in HTML and Web Design . Students of the T117 T170 and TT280 courses should find these tutorials useful.
A Smalltalk programming tutorial suitable for students of of the OU ( Open University ) course M206 an Object oriented Approach, and North Carolina State University course CSC517. Also contains an excellent index for many Smalltalk methods and subjects in the M206 course.
A tutorial on programming in 'C ideal for beginners in C programming and students of the OU ( Open University ) course T223 See my
Leeds City guide

Tenerife information guide

San Marino Apartments
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90. COTUG: Cin Obj Tech Users Group
Provides information about the smalltalk ObjectOriented programming language.
http://www.objectwind.com/cotug/
C incinnati O bject T echnology U sers G roup (COTUG) Nov 2002 final update COTUG topics had been increasingly geared toward XP (Extreme Programming). And the concept of COTUG was too broadly based to adequately address the needs of the growing local XP community. So a new group has formed to take over instead of COTUG. Having served its purpose, COTUG is no more. (Not as certainly as , but close to it). Xp-cinci will be focused on lean-software-development and extreme programming practices. Please join us in bringing lean software development to the Cincinnati area. Please join us at Xp-cinci Meeting monthly with hands-on coding techniques.
Notes from Final Meeting: Thurs 4 Oct
The BIG EVENT: Martin Fowler www.martinfowler.com Multi-time best selling computer book author will speak on Agile Processes and XP. Contact COTUG Facilitating change is more effective than attempting to prevent it. Learn to trust in your ability to respond to unpredictable events; it's more important than trusting in your ability to plan for disaster. CIO magazine article: Secret of Software Success Software Development magazine article: The Agile Manifesto Books by Martin Fowler Advanced Object-Oriented Analysis and Design Using UML Analysis Patterns : Reusable Object Models UML Distilled: A Brief Guide to the Standard Object Modeling Language Refactoring : Improving the Design of Existing Code Planning Extreme Programming (The XP Series)
Agenda
Doors Open Agile Processes and XP
Break
Questions
Directions
Ohio Casualty Group training facilities off of Route-4.

91. 2002 Dr. Dobb's Excellence In Programming Awards
To Adele Goldberg, Dan Ingalls, pioneers of objectoriented programming, and smalltalk language and development environment. As researchers at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), each saw in their own way the promise of objects, and was in a unique position to put theory into practice in an architecture based on objects at all levels. Dr. Dobb's Journal
http://www.ddj.com/documents/s=7119/ddj0205a/0205a.htm

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GO TO... AI Algorithms Basic Benchmarking/Testing C/C++ Programming Communications/Networking Computer Security Data Compression Database Development Distributed Computing Graphics Programming Java Linux Patterns/OOD Perl Python-URL! Real-Time Computing Scientific Computing Scripting/Alt. Languages Tcl-URL! UNIX XML and Web Services GoToMyPC - Secure Remote Access Empower your company with secure remote access. GoToMyPC is fast, secure and easy to set up. Click here for more information and a free trial of GoToMyPC. Web based bug tracking - AdminiTrack.com AdminiTrack offers an effecting web-based bug tracking system designed for professoinal software development teams. Up-To-Date Directory Information available via Web Services. Fresh, accurate data. Easy integration. See your message here Printer Friendly Version
To buy one (or more) of the following articles, click here
2002 Dr. Dobb's Excellence in Programming Awards
Dr. Dobb's Journal May 2002 Since 1995, Dr. Dobb's Journal has presented its Excellence in Programming Award to individuals who, in the spirit of innovation and cooperation, have made significant contributions to the advancement of software development. Past recipients of the Dr. Dobb's Excellence in Programming Award include:
  • Alexander Stepanov, developer of the C++ Standard Template Library.

92. The Smalltalk Brewery, Inc.
VisualWorks performance tuning, mentoring, training we attack and fix the underlying source/cause of 80% of the performance problems attributed to smalltalk Procedural Object Oriented programming POOP.
http://www.smalltalkbrewery.com/
NEWS FLASH On January 1, 1999 The Smalltalk Brewery, Inc and Mercury Interactive, Inc reached an agreement on the further development and support for the VisualWorks/WinRunner Integration package. Mercury stopped producing and selling this integration package over two years ago. The Smalltalk Brewery has been granted development and distribution rights for future releases. Currently, a version of the integration is available for VisualWorks 2.5x, 3.0, and 5i.x to allow integration with WinRunner 6.0x and . The package is in use at several customer sites and pricing details may be requested from WinRunner@SmalltalkBrewery.com . For more information on Mercury Interactive's WinRunner product, please follow this link: Mercury Interactive
Welcome to the Smalltalk Brewery, Inc. Our mission is to prove to the world that Smalltalk applications can be BOTH small and fast! Russell Pencin has been providing Visualworks Performance Tuning to major clients for over 7 years in the United States, Europe, and Australia. Our service is not a long term proposition, in fact most of our contracts last less than TWO WEEKS! These engagements usually result in between 25 and 50% performance improvement as measured by the Visualworks Advanced Tools set. In-memory footprint reductions of 15 to 40% are accomplished regularly. Our philosophy is to point out to your staff the programming techniques that cause 80% of the performance problems attributed to Smalltalk. Instruct them on how to use the analysis tools readily available to realize continued gains long after we are gone. We do NOT try to redesign or rewrite your application, we DO attack and fix the underlying source of performance problems - Procedural Object Oriented Programming (POOP).

93. Slashdot | Smalltalk Solutions 2001 Trip Report
Diverse opinions and debate, many useful points on Squeak, VisualAge, Dolphin, refactoring, Extreme programming, Java, LISP, and ObjectiveC. Slashdot
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/04/18/001236

94. Smalltalk Programming Software: Compare Prices, Check Store Ratings, And Read Pr
16 matches for smalltalk programming Software. Below are BizRate'smost popular matches for smalltalk programming Software. Click
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Sort This Table Price Rating Product Information Rating Lowest Price IBM VisualAge Smalltalk ( ver. 5.0 ) IBM Lotus VisualAge Generator Templates Customizer ( ver. 4. Lotus IBM VisualAge Small Talk Server ( ver. 5.0 ) IBM Compare Top 3 Matches IBM VisualAge Smalltalk Server Workbench ( ver. 5.5 ) IBM IBM VisualAge Smalltalk UML Designer ( ver. 5.5 ) IBM IBM VisualAge Smalltalk Server Workbench ( ver. 5.5 ) IBM IBM VisualAge Smalltalk ( ver. 4.0 ) IBM IBM VisualAge Small Talk Server ( ver. 5.0 )

95. Smalltalk - Webopedia.com
Defines the term 'smalltalk', lists some links where you can find more information. Concise.
http://webopedia.internet.com/Programming/Programming_Languages/Smalltalk.html
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Smalltalk Last modified: Monday, October 27, 1997 An object-oriented operating system and programming language developed at Xerox Corporation's Palo Alto Research Center. Smalltalk was the first object-oriented programming language (Simula was the very first). Although it never achieved the commercial success of other languages such as C++ and Java , Smalltalk is considered by many to be the only true object-oriented programming environment, and the one against which all others must be compared. E-mail this definition to a colleague
For internet.com pages about Smalltalk . Also check out the following links!

96. List Of Useful Smalltalk Selectors
A quickreference list of useful smalltalk selectors (for smalltalk/X documentation but helpful with other smalltalks, also). This list helps you find existing smalltalk methods that can get your job done efficiently.
http://www.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/stx/doc/online/english/programming/select

97. VisualWorks: The Art And Science Of Smalltalk
Introduces programming in smalltalk, explains optimal ways to think about and work with the system.
http://wiki.cs.uiuc.edu/VisualWorks/The Art and Science of Smalltalk
Edit Rename Changes History ...
The Art and Science of Smalltalk
Simon Lewis Paperback - 212 pages (June 1995) Prentice Hall; ISBN: 0133713458 Has a nice cover picture, and the contents are also excellent. I copied and pasted a review from amazon: All the complexities of Smalltalk amazingly simplified! Simon Lewis's book "The Art and Science of Smalltalk" has to be one of the best books on Smalltalk programming I have ever read. After spending months reading many other books on the subject and still not getting a clear, concise description of some important Smalltalk constructs, I could not believe how incredibly readable this book was. Lewis has managed to explain in a few pages what took other authors multiple chapters. In addition, diagrams and figures are only used when they will actually help the reader to understand a concept. Unlike other texts references to figures and diagrams occur in close proximity to them rather than twenty pages before or after. The book is divided into two parts which address different but equally important aspects of programming in Smalltalk. The first section deals with the "science" of Smalltak and covers the development environment, class library, and dependency mechanisms (Model-View-Controller Architecture). The second section gives sage advice on the "art" of Smalltalk. This includes sections on how to best utilize Smalltalk in an environment of extensive reuse, management of Smalltalk projects, and debugging techniques. I would rate this book as a must have for Smalltalk programmers at any level. If I were to teach a course in Smalltalk this book would be required. Lewis should be commended for his command of the Smalltalk language and his eloquence in explaining it to others.

98. Making Smalltalk: Spreading The OO Fun LG #59
Linux Gazette ( 59) series on objectoriented programming for people new to OO, or to programming. Goal to not only introduce OO programming, but to also spread the fun of smalltalking. Teaches smalltalk generally via teaching Squeak.
http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue59/steffler.html
"Linux Gazette... making Linux just a little more fun!
Spreading the OO Fun (Series Introduction) By Jason Steffler
Abstract
When I wrote the first Making Smalltalk with the Penguin article back in March of 2000 [LL] , my target audience was experienced programmers who didn't have much exposure to OO
The target audience for this series are people new to OO or new to programming altogether. The intent is to not only introduce OO programming, but to also spread the fun of Smalltalking. Why do this format/effort when there's lots of good tutorials out there ? Two reasons really: 1) Tutorials are great, but can be static and dated pretty quickly. 2) An ongoing series tends to be more engaging and digestible.
To help address the second reason above, my intent is to keep the articles concise so they can be digested in under an hour . Hopefully, as newbies follow along, they can refer back to the original article and make more sense of it. I plan on having a touch of advanced stuff once in a while to add flavour and as before, the articles are going to be written for read-along or code-along people.
Something new I'm going to try is to make the ongoing series viewable in a contiguous fashion and downloadable in one chunk for people who want to browse the series locally. To do this, click on TOC grapic to right. The articles are going to have 2 sets of links: one set for www links, another set for local links, indicated as:

99. IBM VisualAge Smalltalk
Powerful New Vision of programming gives software developers a set of visual programming tools for developing robust solutions to real business needs in client/server and transaction system environments. Free CD, code downloads, products, descriptions, newsgroups.
http://www-4.ibm.com/software/ad/smalltalk/

100. Intuitive Systems Group
Highly successful group specialising in creating high performance, graphics oriented applications, in financial services, marketing, and sales. Free businessprogramming White Papers. They may use Dolphin smalltalk for some projects?
http://www.intuitive.co.uk

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