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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Modula-2+ is a programming language descended from the Modula-2 language. It was developed at DEC Systems Research Center (SRC) and Acorn Computers Ltd Research Centre in Palo Alto, California. Modula-2+ is Modula-2 with exceptions and threads. The group which developed the language was led by P. Rovner in 1984.[1]
Paradigms | imperative, structured, modular, data and procedure hiding, concurrent |
---|---|
Family | Wirth Modula |
Designed by | Paul Rovner, Roy Levin, John Wick |
Developer | DEC Systems Research Center (SRC) Acorn Research Center |
First appeared | 1984 |
Typing discipline | Static, strong, safe |
Scope | Lexical |
OS | Cross-platform |
License | Proprietary |
Major implementations | |
DEC SRC Modula-2+, CAMEL (C and Modula Exexcution Library) | |
Dialects | |
DEC SRC | |
Influenced by | |
Pascal, ALGOL, Modula-2 | |
Influenced | |
Modula-3 |
Main differences with Modula-2:
Modula-2+ was used to develop Topaz, an operating system for the SRC DEC Firefly shared memory asymmetric multiprocessing workstation.[3] Most Topaz applications were written in Modula-2+, which grew along with the development of the system.[4] Modula-2+ was also used by Acorn in the ARX operating system, and to build an integrated development environment in the Acorn Research Center (ARC).[5] Modula-2+ strongly influenced other languages such as Modula-3, but as of 2005, it had disappeared.
The original developers of Modula-2+ were both acquired: Acorn by Olivetti and Digital Equipment Corporation by Compaq. Compaq was bought by Hewlett-Packard. Olivetti sold the Olivetti Research Center and Olivetti Software Technology Laboratory (after bought Acorn ARC) to Oracle Corporation and was later absorbed by AT&T.[6] DEC have made the SRC-reports available to the public.
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