International Smalltalk Association - définition. Qu'est-ce que International Smalltalk Association
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est International Smalltalk Association - définition

PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Smalltalk-80; SmallTalk; SmallTalk programming language; Smalltalk programming language; Smalltalk (programming language); Smalltalk Programming Language; Visual Smalltalk; Smalltalk/V; Smalltak; Smalltalk-72; Smalltalk 80; ObjectStudio; Objectstudio; Smalltalk syntax; List of Smalltalk implementations; Control structures in Smalltalk; Reflection in Smalltalk; OpenSmalltalk
  • ''Smalltalk-80: The Language and its Implementation'', a.k.a. the "Blue book", an original book on the language

International Smalltalk Association      
<body> (ISA) A user group which published newsletters on Smalltalk-related issues, technical and general information. Its goal was to champion Smalltalk and its uses. It was disbanded around 1991. (1995-02-16)
International City/County Management Association         
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT MANAGERS
International City Management Association; International City Managers' Association
International City/County Management Association (ICMA; originally called the International City Managers' Association) is an association representing professionals in local government management. It is based in Washington, D.
Smalltalk-80         
<language> The classic standard Smalltalk dialect, described in Adele's book, cited below, commonly known as "The Blue Book". ["Smalltalk-80: The Language and Its Implementation", Adele Goldberg et al, A-W 1983]. [BYTE 6(8), Aug 1981]. ftp://st.cs.uiuc.edu/pub/ISA, Smalltalk/MANCHESTER">ftp://st.cs.uiuc.edu/pub/Smalltalk/MANCHESTER, ftp://gnu.org/pub/gnu. Mail server: goodies-lib@r5.cs.man.ac.uk. (2004-12-14)

Wikipédia

Smalltalk

Smalltalk is a purely object oriented programming language (OOP), created in the 1970s for educational use, specifically for constructionist learning, at Xerox PARC by Learning Research Group (LRG) scientists, including Alan Kay, Dan Ingalls, Adele Goldberg, Ted Kaehler, Diana Merry, and Scott Wallace.

In Smalltalk, executing programs are built of opaque, atomic, so-called objects, which are instances of template-code stored in classes, and these objects intercommunicate by passing of messages, via an intermediary virtual machine environment (VM). A relatively small number of objects, called primitives, are not amenable to live redefinition, sometimes being defined independently of the Smalltalk programming environment.

Having undergone significant industry development toward other uses, including business and database functions, Smalltalk is still in use today. When first publicly released, Smalltalk-80 presented innovative and foundational ideas for the nascent field of object-oriented programming (OOP).

Since inception, the language provided interactive programming via an integrated development environment. This requires reflection and late binding in the language execution of code. Later development has led to at least one instance of Smalltalk execution environment which lacks such an integrated graphical user interface or front-end.

Smalltalk-like languages are in active development and have gathered loyal communities of users around them. ANSI Smalltalk was ratified in 1998 and represents the standard version of Smalltalk.

Smalltalk took second place for "most loved programming language" in the Stack Overflow Developer Survey in 2017, but it was not among the 26 most loved programming languages of the 2018 survey.