Clascal: Difference between revisions
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Jwdietrich (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Clascal''' was the first working prototype of Object Pascal. Developed in 1983 by the Personal Office Systems (POS) division (later renamed The Lisa Division, still lat...") |
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Clascal was an extension of [[Lisa Pascal]] that was strongly inspired by Xerox PARC's release of Smalltalk-80 and also by the [[Modula]] language. | Clascal was an extension of [[Lisa Pascal]] that was strongly inspired by Xerox PARC's release of Smalltalk-80 and also by the [[Modula]] language. | ||
== Reference == | |||
* Keohan, Susan. "[http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdf/apple/lisa/toolkit_3.0/Package_2_Examples/02_An_Introduction_To_Clascal_Jul84.pdf An Introduction to Clascal -- Alpha Draft]". September 15, 1983. Lisa Division, Apple Computer. Cupertino, California. | |||
{{Compilers}} | {{Compilers}} |
Revision as of 11:54, 31 December 2014
Clascal was the first working prototype of Object Pascal. Developed in 1983 by the Personal Office Systems (POS) division (later renamed The Lisa Division, still later The 32-Bit Systems Division) of Apple Computer it was the first truly object-oriented version of Pascal.
Clascal was an extension of Lisa Pascal that was strongly inspired by Xerox PARC's release of Smalltalk-80 and also by the Modula language.
Reference
- Keohan, Susan. "An Introduction to Clascal -- Alpha Draft". September 15, 1983. Lisa Division, Apple Computer. Cupertino, California.
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