By Dave Thomas
Communications of the ACM,
October 1995,
Vol. 38 No. 10, Pages 112-114
10.1145/226239.226264
Comments
Over the last 10 years, Smalltalk has moved from the “Parc” to Main Street as a standard object-oriented (OO) fifth generation language (5GL) for enterprise computing. To meet the needs of application developers, Smalltalk environments and tools have matured from the original research implementations to full-featured, multiplatform development environments. A recent study of development tools conducted by Software Productivity Research in Massachusetts for a software productivity consortium ranked Smalltalk first in most categories. What is surprising about this study is the application: a demanding telephone switch traditionally dominated by C or proprietary talc languages such as Chill, Protel, and Plex. The fact that Smalltalk ranked so highly is a testimony that Smalltalk is an application 5GL that scales. This article discusses the major technical challenges addressed by Smalltalk implementors and application developers working on a wide spectrum of applications.
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