Concepts in programming languages
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Concepts in programming languages
Cambridge University Press, 2003
Available at / 27 libraries
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University of Tsukuba Library, Library on Library and Information Science
007.64-Mi5910007006133
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
For undergraduate and beginning graduate students, this textbook explains and examines the central concepts used in modern programming languages, such as functions, types, memory management, and control. The book is unique in its comprehensive presentation and comparison of major object-oriented programming languages. Separate chapters examine the history of objects, Simula and Smalltalk, and the prominent languages C++ and Java. The author presents foundational topics, such as lambda calculus and denotational semantics, in an easy-to-read, informal style, focusing on the main insights provided by these theories. Advanced topics include concurrency, concurrent object-oriented programming, program components, and inter-language interoperability. A chapter on logic programming illustrates the importance of specialized programming methods for certain kinds of problems. This book will give the reader a better understanding of the issues and tradeoffs that arise in programming language design, and a better appreciation of the advantages and pitfalls of the programming languages they use.
Table of Contents
- Part I. Functions and Foundations: 1. Introduction
- 2. Computability
- 3. Lisp: functions, recursion and lists
- 4. Fundamentals
- Part II. Procedures, Types, Memory Management and Control: 5. The Algol family and ML
- 6. Type systems and type inference
- 7. Scope, functions and storage management
- 8. Control in sequential languages
- Part III. Modularity, Abstraction and Object-Oriented Programming: 9. Data abstraction and modularity
- 10. Concepts in object-oriented languages
- 11. History of objects: simula and smalltalk
- 12. Objects and run-time efficiency: C++
- 13. Portability and safety: Java
- Part IV. Concurrency and Logic Programming: 14. Concurrent and distributed programming
- 15. The logic programming paradigm and prolog by Krzysztof Apt
- Appendix: additional programming examples
- Glossary.
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