SIMULA I
<language> SIMUlation LAnguage.
An extension to ALGOL 60 for the Univac 1107 designed in 1962 by Kristen Nygaard
and Ole-Johan Dahl and implemented in 1964. SIMULA I was designed for discrete
simulation. It introduced the record class, leading the way to data abstraction
and object-oriented programming languages like Smalltalk. It also featured
coroutines.
SIMULA's philosophy was the result of addressing the problems of describing
complex systems for the purpose of simulating them. This philosophy proved to be
applicable for describing complex systems generally (not just for simulation)
and so SIMULA is a general-purpose object-oriented application programming
language which also has very good discrete event simulation capability.
Virtually all OOP products are derived in some manner from SIMULA.
For a description of the evolution of SIMULA and therefore the fundamental
concepts of OOP, see Dahl and Nygaard in ["History of Programming Languages".
Ed. R. W. Wexelblat. Addison-Wesley, 1981].
(1995-03-29)
Nearby terms:
simship « SIMULA « SIMULA 67 « SIMULA I »
simulated annealing » Simulating Digital Systems »
simulation
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