Smalltalk
<language> The pioneering
object-oriented programming system developed in 1972 by the Software Concepts Group, led by
Alan Kay, at
Xerox PARC between 1971 and 1983.
It includes a language, a programming environment, and an extensive object library.
Smalltalk took the concepts of
class and
message from Simula-67 and made them all-pervasive.
Innovations included the
bitmap display, windowing system, and use of a
mouse.
The
syntax is very simple.
The fundamental construction is to send a message to an
object:
object message
or with extra parameters
object message: param1 secondArg: param2 .. nthArg: paramN
where "secondArg:" etc. are considered to be part of the message name.
Five pseudo-variables are defined: "self", "super", "nil", "true", "false".
"self" is the receiver of the current message.
"super" is used to delegate processing of a message to the
superclass of the receiver.
"nil" is a reference to "nothing" (an instance of UndefinedObject).
All variables initially contain a reference to nil.
"true" and "false" are Booleans.
In Smalltalk, any message can be sent to any object.
The recipient object itself decides (based on the message name, also called the "message selector") how to respond to the message.
Because of that, the
multiple inheritance system included in the early versions of Smalltalk-80 appeared to be unused in practice.
All modern implementations have single inheritance, so each class can have at most one superclass.
Early implementations were
interpreted but all modern ones use
dynamic translation (JIT).
Early versions were Smalltalk-72, Smalltalk-74, Smalltalk-76 (inheritance taken from Simula, and concurrency), and Smalltalk-78,
Smalltalk-80.
Other versions include
Little Smalltalk,
Smalltalk/V,
Kamin's interpreters.
Current versions are
VisualWorks,
Squeak, VisualAge, Dolphin Smalltalk, Object Studio,
GNU Smalltalk.
See also:
International Smalltalk Association.
UIUC Smalltalk archive (http://st-www.cs.uiuc.edu/). FAQ (http://XCF.Berkeley.EDU/pub/misc/smalltalk/FAQ/).
Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.smalltalk.
["The Smalltalk-76 Programming System Design and Implementation", D.H. Ingalls, 5th POPL, ACM 1978, pp. 9-16].