Architectures, languages and techniques for concurrent systems : WoTUG-22 ; Proceedings of the 22nd Wrold Occam and Transputer User Group Technical Meeting, 11-14 April 1999, Keele, United Kingdom
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Bibliographic Information
Architectures, languages and techniques for concurrent systems : WoTUG-22 ; Proceedings of the 22nd Wrold Occam and Transputer User Group Technical Meeting, 11-14 April 1999, Keele, United Kingdom
(Concurrent systems engineering series, v. 57)
IOS press, c1999 , Ohmsha
- IOS press
- Ohmsha
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Note
Includes references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
During the past 15 years concurrency in programming languages such as Java rose and fell, and again became popular. At this moment developers advise us to avoid concurrency programming. They are using a host of deprecated methods in the latest releases. How are we to understand the love-hate relationship with what should be a widely used approach of tackling real-world problems? The aim of "Architectures, Languages and Techniques" is to encourage the safe, efficient and effective use of parallel computing. It is generally agreed that concurrency is found in most real applications and that it "should" be natural to use concurrency in programming. However, there has grown up a myth that concurrency is "hard" and only for the hardened expert. The papers collected in this book cover the whole spectrum of concurrency, from theoretical underpinnings to applications. The message passing style of concurrency, developed in the Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP) approach, is considered, and extensions are proposed.
CSP's realization in the programming language occam is used directly for applications as diverse as modelling of concurrent systems and the descriptions of concurrent hardware. This latter application may be compared to the use of Jave for the same purpose. Concurrency and the use of Java is the subject of further papers, as is the provision of CSP-like facilities in Java and C and techniques to use these languages to construct reliable concurrent systems. At a time when concurrency gives headaches, this book brings a welcome breath of fresh air. Concurrency can really be a positive way forward.
by "Nielsen BookData"