Difference between revisions of "Publications/burrus.03.mpool"
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| authors = Nicolas Burrus, Alexandre Duret-Lutz, Thierry Géraud, David Lesage, Raphaël Poss |
| authors = Nicolas Burrus, Alexandre Duret-Lutz, Thierry Géraud, David Lesage, Raphaël Poss |
Revision as of 15:50, 14 November 2013
- Authors
- Nicolas Burrus, Alexandre Duret-Lutz, Thierry Géraud, David Lesage, Raphaël Poss
- Where
- Proceedings of the Workshop on Multiple Paradigm with Object-Oriented Languages (MPOOL)
- Place
- Anaheim, CA, USA
- Type
- inproceedings
- Projects
- Olena
- Date
- 2003-10-29
Abstract
Object-oriented and generic programming are both supported in C++. OOP provides high expressiveness whereas GP leads to more efficient programs by avoiding dynamic typing. This paper presents SCOOP, a new paradigm which enables both classical OO design and high performance in C++ by mixing OOP and GP. We show how classical and advanced OO features such as virtual methods, multiple inheritance, argument covariance, virtual types and multimethods can be implemented in a fully statically typed model, hence without run-time overhead.
Documents
Bibtex (lrde.bib)
@InProceedings{ burrus.03.mpool, author = {Nicolas Burrus and Alexandre Duret-Lutz and Thierry G\'eraud and David Lesage and Rapha\"el Poss}, title = {A static {C++} object-oriented programming ({SCOOP}) paradigm mixing benefits of traditional {OOP} and generic programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Workshop on Multiple Paradigm with Object-Oriented Languages (MPOOL)}, year = 2003, address = {Anaheim, CA, USA}, month = oct, project = {Olena}, abstract = {Object-oriented and generic programming are both supported in C++. OOP provides high expressiveness whereas GP leads to more efficient programs by avoiding dynamic typing. This paper presents SCOOP, a new paradigm which enables both classical OO design and high performance in C++ by mixing OOP and GP. We show how classical and advanced OO features such as virtual methods, multiple inheritance, argument covariance, virtual types and multimethods can be implemented in a fully statically typed model, hence without run-time overhead.} }