at:introduction
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at:introduction [2007/06/19 16:49] – tvcutsem | at:introduction [2007/11/13 19:43] – added tvcutsem | ||
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* flexible: like Smalltalk, Self and Ruby, AmbientTalk embraces the use of elegant and expressive **block closures** to achieve a level of reusability far exceeding that of Java or similar languages lacking true closures. | * flexible: like Smalltalk, Self and Ruby, AmbientTalk embraces the use of elegant and expressive **block closures** to achieve a level of reusability far exceeding that of Java or similar languages lacking true closures. | ||
* event-driven: | * event-driven: | ||
- | * distributed: | + | * distributed: |
* **symbiotic**: | * **symbiotic**: | ||
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Of course, we are not claiming that AmbientTalk is a good replacement for distributed computing standards such as CORBA or Jini, which are much more flexible, at the cost of increased complexity. AmbientTalk is simply a lightweight alternative for doing experimental research. | Of course, we are not claiming that AmbientTalk is a good replacement for distributed computing standards such as CORBA or Jini, which are much more flexible, at the cost of increased complexity. AmbientTalk is simply a lightweight alternative for doing experimental research. | ||
- | So, you read the introduction and are interested in all of the gory details of the language? In that case, you can go ahead and [[at: | + | ===== Moving on ===== |
+ | |||
+ | So, you read the introduction and are interested in all of the gory details of the language? In that case, you can go ahead and [[at: |
at/introduction.txt · Last modified: 2008/07/15 12:19 by tvcutsem