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         Smalltalk Programming:     more books (86)
  1. Using Visualage Smalltalk Objectextender by IBM Redbooks, 1999-03
  2. Squeak: Open Personal Computing and Multimedia by Mark J. Guzdial, Kimberly M. Rose, 2001-08-02
  3. Visualage Generator V4 System Development Guide (IBM redbooks) by IBM Redbooks, 1999-10
  4. The Design Patterns Smalltalk Companion (Hardcover-1998) (Software Patterns Series) by Sherman R. Alpert, Kyle Brown, et all 1998
  5. Smalltalk-80 to SOAR code (Report. University of California, Berkeley. Computer Science Division) by William R Bush, 1986
  6. Using the Visualage for Smalltalk Tivoli Connection to Create a Tivoli-Manageable Application by IBM Redbooks, 1997-12
  7. Multi-User Smalltalk (SIGS management briefings) by Jay Almarode, 1996-11
  8. Paging on an object-oriented personal computer for smalltalk (Report) by Ricki Blau, 1983
  9. Actors in a Smalltalk multiprocessor: A case for limited parallelism (SCS-TR. Carleton University. School of Computer Science) by David A Thomas, 1986
  10. Workshop on object-oriented programming (Technical report. Brown University. Dept. of Computer Science) by Peter Wegner, 1987
  11. Smalltalk Developer's Guide/Book and Cd-Rom by Jonathon Pletzke, 1996-01
  12. Actra--a multiasking/multiprocessing Smalltalk (SCS-TR. Carleton University. School of Computer Science) by David A Thomas, 1986
  13. Comments on the learnability and usability of smalltalk for casual users (Research Report RC. International Business Machines Corporation. Research Division) by Jakob Nielsen, 1986
  14. As/400 Application Development With Visual Age V2.0 (The Visualage Series)

101. Discovering Smalltalk - Addison-Wesley And Benjamin Cummings Catalog
By Wilf R. Lalonde; AddisonWesley, 1994, ISBN 0805327207. Comprehensive introduction to language, detailed coverage of fundamental object-oriented programming concepts objects, parts, methods, classes, inheritance. Addison-Wesley
http://www.aw-bc.com/catalog/academic/product/0,4096,0805327207,00.html
Select a Discipline Chemistry Computer Science Economics Finance Life Science Mathematics Physics/Astronomy Statistics by Keyword by Author by Title by ISBN Advanced Search ABOUT THIS PRODUCT Table of Contents About the Author(s) RESOURCES Discipline-Specific RELATED TITLES SmalltalkProgramming (Computer Science) Discovering Smalltalk View Larger Image Wilf LaLonde
ISBN: 0-8053-2720-7
Publisher: Addison Wesley Professional
Format: Paper; 576 pp
Status: AOD
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102. Smalltalk With Style
By Suzanne Skublics, Edward J. Klimas, David A. Thomas; Prentice Hall, 1996, ISBN 0131655493. For OO programming courses; fills gap between software engineering principles and practice of programming in OOP languages. Prentice Hall
http://vig.prenhall.com/catalog/academic/product/0,4096,0131655493,00.html

103. Pocket Smalltalk For Nokia 9110 Communicator
Communicator. Pocket smalltalk is an implementation of the popular programming language smalltalk, originally designed for the PalmPilot.
http://www.i.cz/PeN/pst9110.html
last updated 2000-03-17
A Smalltalk System for the Nokia 9110 Communicator
Pocket Smalltalk is an implementation of the popular programming language Smalltalk, originally designed for the PalmPilot. It consists of a development environment which runs on Windows 95/NT along with a cross-compiler which can generate "application" files from Smalltalk source code. You will find all of the information about Pocket Smalltalk at Pocket Smalltalk Web site . This page is a temporary page desribing an early alpha version of the port of the Pocket Smalltalk to the Nokia 9110 Communicator platform (see more at Nokia 9110 site There are the following downloads available: Current progress report (updated daily if there are news to tell):
  • Version 0.8 released on 2000-03-17 (able to do full GEOS/Communicator UI, includes runtime Smalltalk expression evaluator as a demo)
For more information, please e-mail to Petr Novak

104. Smalltalk Best Practice Patterns
By Kent Beck; Prentice Hall, 1997, ISBN 013476904X. Real world style guide for better programming; gives set of patterns that organize informal experience successful smalltalk programmers learned the hard way. Prentice Hall
http://vig.prenhall.com/catalog/academic/product/0,4096,013476904X,00.html

105. Self Home Page
Project home, for this simpler smalltalk, at Sun Microsystems Labs. Has newest public release, papers on Self, OO, and prototype programming, tutorial, education resources, mail list archive, links.
http://research.sun.com/self/
sun.com How To Buy My Sun Worldwide Sites ... Sun Labs Europe Related External Research Office ExperimentalStuff.com Accessibility Usability Labs
The Power of Simplicity
The Self Group , located at Sun Microsystems Laboratories , was dedicated to making the world safe for objects.
Self 4.2
Self 4.2.1 is the most recent public release (April 2004). It features the optimizing compiler on the PowerPC, and a working source-level profiler. Jump here to find out more.
Self 4.1
Self 4.1.6 was the most previous public release (September 2002). It runs on the Macintosh as well as on machines from Sun Microsystems, Inc. Jump here to find out more.
Self 4.0
Self 4.0 was a previous public release (July 1995). Jump here to find out more.
More About Self

106. Fiscal 1994 Project Portfolio Report
Top/Computers/programming/Languages/smalltalk/Self
http://research.sun.com/techrep/1994/annualreport94/self.html
sun.com How To Buy My Sun Worldwide Sites ... Sun Labs Europe Related External Research Office ExperimentalStuff.com Accessibility Usability Labs
Fiscal 1994 Project Portfolio Report
Self
Randy Smith and Dave Ungar, Principal Investigators randall.smith@Eng.Sun.COM
david.ungar@Eng.Sun.COM
Overall Objective
To improve programmer productivity by creating a language and programming environment based entirely on simple objects.
Objective for FY94
To add support for the less sophisticated programmer, so that Self can address the needs of a very wide range of users.
Description
Users will be drawn to Self by an unusually engaging, direct-manipulation graphical interface. They will find Self's simple semantics easy to learn, will be gratified by Self's immediate response to programming changes, and will find it easy to write short programs by assembling prefabricated parts in the interface. Self will be a high-performance, object-oriented programming language and environment that combines simplicity with power. As users grow in ambition and sophistication, they will discover more components available for reuse. All components, having been built in Self, will be easy to customize. Users will smoothly incorporate software written in other languages into their Self objects, and they will build moderately large applications that do not suffer from performance problems.
Accomplishments
We have concentrated on giving Self a new user interface, bringing the implementation up to industrial strength, and providing better tools for programming in Self. Our particular new targets have been to add direct manipulation construction like that in many

107. Java For Smalltalk Programmers
One of the original objectoriented programming languages, smalltalk has a loyal user-base; but the industry is increasingly moving toward Java for commercial
http://www.developer.com/tech/article.php/614371
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Click Here Gaim's Ground in a Closed IM World June 3, 2004
Geronimo Project Joins Apache
June 3, 2004
Opera Patches URL-Spoofing Flaw
June 3, 2004
Open Sourcing Ahead for Solaris
June 2, 2004 Developer.com Update Codeguru.com Update Jars.com Update Gamelan.com Update 15Seconds HTML 15Seconds Text 4 Guys from Rolla ASP Wire ASP 101 Database Journal DBASupport Java Boutique JNews IT Career Source Tech Events List VB Wire WebDeveloper.com WebReference HTML WebReference Text Virtual Dr. Text Java for Smalltalk programmers By Chris Laffra A noted speaker on object technology has argued that Java will be the end of Smalltalk as we know it [Sutherland 97]. Smalltalk has always struggled uphill to gain widespread acceptance in commercial software development, regardless of its superior qualities. Just step into your local bookstore and count the number of Smalltalk books available. It will be close or equal to zero. But it is the emergence of Java and its unprecedented media exposure that may actually mean the final blow to the early object-oriented programming language. Although ever popular among academic types and rogue software development shops, Smalltalk has struggled to gain acceptance in areas that require the highest possible performance. Smalltalk is usually observed to be slow, by many critics. Its loose typing delays a lot of verification to runtime, which is unacceptable to strong typing advocates.

108. Slate Language Website
s, programming manual, tutorials, summaries, bulletin board Swiki, CVS. Open Source, LGPL......LanguageOS based on CLOS, Self, smalltalk; smalltalk syntax; libraries inspired by Common Lisp, Dylan, Strongtalk (strong typing).
http://slate.tunes.org/
News Overview Downloads Documentation ... Wiki
The Home of the Slate Programming Language
Slate: Less talk, more rock!
News
May 1, 2004
Lee Salzman has replaced his short paper on PMD with a full thesis , to complete his graduation requirements, with many corrections, clarifications and experience reports added. Also there is a wonderful slide presentation explaining the benefits of PMD in laymens' terms. See also the recommended reading area of the wiki.
March 27, 2004
Hey, folks, we've been Slashdotted . This is not our doing, and we are not at a stage where we're offering a real tutorial or a representative release configuration. So don't believe your first impressions.
January 4, 2004
Release 0.2.1 is out, in the usual place. This is a maintenance update, consisting of many bug-fixes and polishing of the libraries, as well as new work which is not yet complete towards 0.3. See downloads area and announcement for details.
December 5, 2003
Release 0.2 is official. See the downloads area for details. Source is provided, but no binaries. This release is the last major point release for Slate under Lisp. Full details are provided in the mailing list announcement
July 29, 2003

109. Java For Smalltalk Programmers
will succeed in replacing both C++ and smalltalk. Heterogeneous development environments, allowing seamless interaction between any programming language are
http://www.developer.com/java/other/article.php/603521
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June 8, 2004
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June 7, 2004
Adobe Launches PDF Platform For Web Services
June 7, 2004 Developer.com Update Codeguru.com Update Jars.com Update Gamelan.com Update 15Seconds HTML 15Seconds Text 4 Guys from Rolla ASP Wire ASP 101 Database Journal DBASupport Java Boutique JNews IT Career Source Tech Events List VB Wire WebDeveloper.com WebReference HTML WebReference Text Virtual Dr. Text Java for Smalltalk programmers By Chris Laffra A noted speaker on object technology has argued that Java will be the end of Smalltalk as we know it [Sutherland 97]. Smalltalk has always struggled uphill to gain widespread acceptance in commercial software development, regardless of its superior qualities. Just step into your local bookstore and count the number of Smalltalk books available. It will be close or equal to zero. But it is the emergence of Java and its unprecedented media exposure that may actually mean the final blow to the early object-oriented programming language. Although ever popular among academic types and rogue software development shops, Smalltalk has struggled to gain acceptance in areas that require the highest possible performance. Smalltalk is usually observed to be slow, by many critics. Its loose typing delays a lot of verification to runtime, which is unacceptable to strong typing advocates.

110. IBM Smalltalk Tutorial
By KhengKhoon Khor, Nathaniel L. Chavis, Steve M. Lovett, David C. White; IBM, 1995. Audience those knowing general programming terms, concepts, not OO or smalltalk; introduces vital ideas, techniques needed by novice; not a full guide to every language feature, libraries.
http://www.inf.ufsc.br/poo/smalltalk/ibm/
Welcome to IBM Smalltalk Tutorial
Smalltalk is a popular object-oriented programming language. This tutorial covers object-oriented programming (OOP) with IBM Smalltalk. The material covered here is intended for the programmers with no prior experience with Smalltalk. This tutorial does not provide an exhaustive guide to every feature of the language and its libraries. Instead, it is intended to introduce important ideas and techniques needed by the Smalltalk novice. It is assumed that the reader is familiar with general programming terms and concepts, though not necessarily with object-oriented programming. To find out how to use this tutorial click here!
How to Use This Tutorial?
- Find your way around this tutorial
What is Object-Oriented Programming?
- An overview of the OOP concept
IBM Smalltalk Tutorial.
- Table of Contents
Other Internet Smalltalk Resources.
- Other Smalltalk related sites Please feel free to send us your comments or suggestions. We welcome feedback. Kheng-Khoon Khor , Nathaniel L. Chavis (nlchavis@eos.ncsu.edu), Steve M. Lovett (smlovett@eos.ncsu.edu), and David C. White (dcwhite@eos.ncsu.edu) at North Carolina State University

111. VisualAge Smalltalk - Product Overview - IBM Software
Powerful vision of programming gives developers a set of visual programming tools to develop robust solutions to real business needs in client/server and transaction system environments. Free CD, code downloads, products, descriptions, newsgroups.
http://www-3.ibm.com/software/awdtools/smalltalk/
Home My account Select a country All software products VisualAge Smalltalk Features and benefits System requirements Library News ... Support Related software Related hardware IBM
Warranty info

Software
Software Development Overview VisualAge Smalltalk Enterprise V6.0 allows for incremental and rapid development of new Smalltalk applications.
Developers can build and deploy enterprise Web service solutions for dynamic e-business using VisualAge Smalltalk.
Communication transactions can be protected with Secure Socket Layer (SSL) support.
With VisualAge Smalltalk V6.0.1, asynchronous call-out is available on all deployment platform including OS/390, z/OS, HP-UX, and Red Hat Linux
The powerful tools of Server Workbench are now included in VisualAge Smalltalk Enterprise. Currency for databases, communication protocols and Java™ integration have been updated.
VisualAge Smalltalk Enterprise V6.0.2 fixpack is now available for download from this site.
Editions Smalltalk Server for OS/390
Highlights Download the V6.0.2. fix pack Smalltalk on the GRID VisualAge Smalltalk V6.0 service extended - Dec. 2005 Upgrades/Migrations Migrate to VisualAge Smalltalk Communities Newsgroup Eye on Smalltalk WebSphere Developer Domain
About IBM
... Contact

112. Galaxy Directory : Smalltalk < Programming Languages < Computer Technology < Eng
The Pure Object Environment and programming Language. Welcome to smalltalk.org where we focus on the object oriented smalltalk computer language and environment
http://www.galaxy.com/galaxy/Engineering-and-Technology/Computer-Technology/Prog
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113. IBM Redbooks | VisualAge For Smalltalk Handbook - Volume 1: Fundamentals
By Andi Bitterer, Vincent Dijkstra, Boris Shingarov; IBM Redbooks; 1997, ISBN 0738400874. Focus general programming questions on topics such as image maintenance, graphical user interfaces, naming conventions, IBM smalltalk language. IBM, online
http://publib-b.boulder.ibm.com/Redbooks.nsf/RedbookAbstracts/sg244828.html
Redbooks All IBM Home My account Select a country Redbooks Home Publications: Drafts Redbooks Redpapers Technotes ... Redbook Domains Select one Application Dev DB2 Info Mgmt IBM TotalStorage iSeries Linux Lotus Networking On Demand/Grid pSeries Solutions Tivoli WebSphere Windows xSeries zSeries Residencies Workshops Redbooks on CD How to buy ... Mailing list Related links: IBM Publications Technical Training Developers IBM Business Partners
VisualAge for Smalltalk Handbook - Volume 1: Fundamentals
Abstract
This book addresses many common questions in the VisualAge for
Smalltalk development arena. It covers various aspects of VisualAge
and IBM Smalltalk through answers to frequently asked questions,
hints and tips from users and developers, and online bulletin
boards inside and outside of IBM.
This redbook will help VisualAge for Smalltalk developers find
answers to their everyday questions. The book provides usage
guidelines for areas such as change management, performance,
database access, and transaction processing, to help developers avoid common programming pitfalls.

114. Title Details - Cambridge University Press
By Joseph Pelrine, Alan Knight, Adrian Cho; Cambridge University Press; 2001, ISBN 0521666503. Deep exploration of IBM team programming environment for smalltalk, Java; introduction, advanced topics, detailed examples. Cambridge University
http://titles.cambridge.org/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521666503

115. Making Smalltalk: Spreading The OO Fun LG #59
Series on objectoriented programming for users new to OO, or programming. Goal introduce OO programming, and spread the fun of smalltalking. Teaches smalltalk generally by teaching Squeak. Text, code, screenshots. Linux Gazette 59
http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue59/steffler.html
"Linux Gazette... making Linux just a little more fun!
Spreading the OO Fun (Series Introduction) By Jason Steffler
Abstract
When I wrote the first Making Smalltalk with the Penguin article back in March of 2000 [LL] , my target audience was experienced programmers who didn't have much exposure to OO
The target audience for this series are people new to OO or new to programming altogether. The intent is to not only introduce OO programming, but to also spread the fun of Smalltalking. Why do this format/effort when there's lots of good tutorials out there ? Two reasons really: 1) Tutorials are great, but can be static and dated pretty quickly. 2) An ongoing series tends to be more engaging and digestible.
To help address the second reason above, my intent is to keep the articles concise so they can be digested in under an hour . Hopefully, as newbies follow along, they can refer back to the original article and make more sense of it. I plan on having a touch of advanced stuff once in a while to add flavour and as before, the articles are going to be written for read-along or code-along people.
Something new I'm going to try is to make the ongoing series viewable in a contiguous fashion and downloadable in one chunk for people who want to browse the series locally. To do this, click on TOC grapic to right. The articles are going to have 2 sets of links: one set for www links, another set for local links, indicated as:

116. Bistro
This paper introduces the Bistro programming language and compares it to smalltalk and Java. By Nik Boyd.
http://home.labridge.com/~nikboyd/papers/bistro/intro/
Nik Boyd
Table 1. Language Features Language Model Bistro has a declarative language model. Name Spaces Classes Metaclasses Bistro supports the definition of metaclasses like those found in Smalltalk. Types Bistro supports the definition and use of first-class interfaces (as types). Metatypes Just as each Bistro class has a corresponding metaclass, each type has a metatype. Access Controls public, protected, private. Decorations Bistro also supports: abstract, final, synchronized, native, static. In-line Variables Bistro supports in-line variable declaration and initialization. Type Specifications Bistro variable and argument type specifications are optional. Natural Methods Bistro natural methods closely resemble those of Smalltalk. Primitive Methods Interoperability Comments Blocks Adapters Bistro uses a special message idiom for defining anonymous inner classes. Threads Bistro blocks support the fork Exceptions Migration Bistro includes a utility for converting Smalltalk class sources to Bistro.
LANGUAGE MODEL
Traditionally, Smalltalk systems were built in the context of an object memory

117. Hans-Martin Mosner
smalltalk programmer, at Georg Heeg, works Hyperliterate programming, hypermedia documentation systems, WysiTeX WYSIWYG TeX editor, virtual machines, many little Goodies; simulation systems, network management tools.
http://www.heeg.de/~hmm/
Hans-Martin Mosner
My Job
I am Smalltalk programmer at Georg Heeg , working on such diverse things as If you want to contact me, here's my work address and e-mail:
Address:
Hans-Martin Mosner
Georg Heeg Objektorientierte Systeme
Postfach 52 01 01
D-44207 Dortmund
Germany
(central exchange): e-mail:
hmm@heeg.de
My private interests
  • My wife Cornelia and my kids Jonatan and Lydia Smalltalk ( Squeak Music making (Singing) My Macintosh People that I know and like

Last Change and Check: 2 October 1996

118. Freshmeat.net: Project Details For Squeak
Superportable, multi-media capable smalltalk-80 based object-oriented programming environment, coded in all smalltalk, high-performance VM, made by compiling Squeak VM code into efficient, portable C. Two GUIs Morphic (from Self language), original MVC. Status page description, release announcements, downloads, comments, links, contact. freshmeat.net, Open Source, SqueakL
http://freshmeat.net/projects/squeak/
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[Project]
... [Project]
Squeak - Default branch

by Cees de Groot - Wednesday, September 23rd 1998 04:04 PDT Section: Unix
About:

Squeak is an OpenSource and super-portable implementation of a multi-media capable Smalltalk-80 based object-oriented programming environment. It is written entirely in Smalltalk and has a high-performance VM, created by compiling the Smalltalk VM code into efficient and portable C code. It now uses the Self language's Morphic User Interface but still provides the original MVC GUI as well. Author:
Cees de Groot [contact developer] Rating: reset (10 votes) Homepage:
http://squeak.org/

Tar/GZ: ftp://st.cs.uiuc.edu/[..]-3.5-5180-i686-pc-linux-gnu-3.4-1.tar.gz Zip: ftp://st.cs.uiuc.edu/[..]k/3.5/win/Squeak3.5-current-win-full.zip Changelog: http://www-sor.inria.fr/~piumarta/squeak/ OS X package: ftp://st.cs.uiuc.edu/[..]3.5/mac/Squeak3.5-current-MacOS-Full.sit Mirror site: http://www-sor.inria.fr/~piumarta/squeak/

119. Smalltalk - "The Best Way To Predict The Future Is To Invent It"
Introduction. This is a brief overview of the programming language smalltalk. Often smalltalk programs can actually do a lot more with much less code.
http://www.bath.ac.uk/~cs1ah/smalltalk/
@import "media/print.css";
Smalltalk
"The best way to predict the future is to invent it"
- Alan Kay
Introduction
This is a brief overview of the programming language Smalltalk. It is part of a programming languages module in the Computer Science department at the University of Bath We hope we have covered a wide range of interesting topics about the language. They can all be reached using the navigation to the left. "The simplicity, effectiveness and elegance of Smalltalk comes from it's simple yet highly expressive syntax and the design of it's various libraries of 'objects'. Smalltalk was the first, and remains one of the few, pure object systems, which simply means that everything in a Smalltalk program is an object. Smalltalk is generally recognized as the second Object Programming Language and the first true Integrated Development Environment (IDE). All of these have important benefits. "An object is a collection of data grouped together in meaningful ways with related operations, or chunks of programs, that manipulate that data. It is surprising how well this way of organizing software works. Objects get work done by sending 'messages' to each other. i.e. In english this would be like Jill saying to Jack, Jack drop the ball please. In Smalltalk this might be written as jack dropTheBall. Communication via messages is something that we're all familar with in our lives. Messages can be thought of as 'verbs' that ask the receiving object to perform an operation. Messages may have objects as parameters. i.e. In english this would be like someone saying to Jack, Jack pass the ball to Jill. In Smalltalk this might be written as jack passTheBallTo: jill or even more flexibly as jack pass: theBall to: jill so that other objects, like aPen, can be passed around. A nice example of accomplishing more with less.

120. Manageability - Large-scale Smalltalk Programs
It is usually defined as a programming language AND environment. The smalltalk compiler and IDE are written in smalltalk (since the 80s or so).
http://www.manageability.org/blog/archive/20030426#does_static_typing_destroy_en

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